Now, the Laboratory of
Malaria Immunology Team at the Immunology Frontier Research Center (IFReC), Osaka University, headed by Professor Cevayir COBAN, have used mouse malaria models to show that robust immune activation and invasion of parasite by - products into the bone marrow during and after malaria infection leads to an adverse balance in bone homeostasis - a process usually tightly controlled - by bone forming osteoblasts and bone resorbing osteo
Malaria Immunology Team at the Immunology Frontier
Research Center (IFReC), Osaka University, headed by Professor Cevayir COBAN, have used mouse
malaria models to show that robust immune activation and invasion of parasite by - products into the bone marrow during and after malaria infection leads to an adverse balance in bone homeostasis - a process usually tightly controlled - by bone forming osteoblasts and bone resorbing osteo
malaria models to show that robust immune activation and invasion of parasite by - products into the bone marrow during and after
malaria infection leads to an adverse balance in bone homeostasis - a process usually tightly controlled - by bone forming osteoblasts and bone resorbing osteo
malaria infection leads to an adverse balance
in bone homeostasis - a process usually tightly controlled - by bone forming osteoblasts and bone resorbing osteoclasts.
• GRK 2046: «Parasite Infections: From Experimental
Models to Natural Systems» • iGRK 2290: «Crossing Boundaries: Molecular Interactions
in Malaria» • GRK 2318: «Tight junctions and their proteins: molecular features and actions
in health and disease» • International Max - Planck
Research School for Infectious Diseases and Immunology» (IMPRS - IDI)