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Understanding the Role of Mechanics in Sporozoite Migration

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Manage episode 386124493 series 3531530
Content provided by Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Researchers look under the microscope to better understand how sporozoites move in the skin.

Transcript

The malaria parasite changes shape throughout its lifecycle, and it’s the sporozoite - a slender, crescent-like form of the parasite - which is injected into the human by mosquitoes.

Accumulating in the mosquito in the salivary glands, sporozoites are injected individually into the skin, through the mosquito’s proboscis. In the skin, sporozites migrate to find and enter a blood vessel.

Researchers wanted to better understand how sporozoites move in the skin. Rather than looking at single sporozoites, they turned to the cell collectives originating from the salivary glands.

In dissected salivary glands, sporozoites move in vortices, spinning circles with a hole in the middle. While the holes demonstrate that sporozoites are relatively stiff and cannot bend too much, in the rest of the vortices they observed strong mechanical flexibility. Moreover, the vortices as a whole oscillated in size.

Source

Collective migration reveals mechanical flexibility of malaria parasites

About The Podcast

The Johns Hopkins Malaria Minute podcast is produced by the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute to highlight impactful malaria research and to share it with the global community.

  continue reading

68 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 386124493 series 3531530
Content provided by Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Researchers look under the microscope to better understand how sporozoites move in the skin.

Transcript

The malaria parasite changes shape throughout its lifecycle, and it’s the sporozoite - a slender, crescent-like form of the parasite - which is injected into the human by mosquitoes.

Accumulating in the mosquito in the salivary glands, sporozoites are injected individually into the skin, through the mosquito’s proboscis. In the skin, sporozites migrate to find and enter a blood vessel.

Researchers wanted to better understand how sporozoites move in the skin. Rather than looking at single sporozoites, they turned to the cell collectives originating from the salivary glands.

In dissected salivary glands, sporozoites move in vortices, spinning circles with a hole in the middle. While the holes demonstrate that sporozoites are relatively stiff and cannot bend too much, in the rest of the vortices they observed strong mechanical flexibility. Moreover, the vortices as a whole oscillated in size.

Source

Collective migration reveals mechanical flexibility of malaria parasites

About The Podcast

The Johns Hopkins Malaria Minute podcast is produced by the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute to highlight impactful malaria research and to share it with the global community.

  continue reading

68 episodes

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