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1 August 2003 Ascorbic Acid Is a Requirement for the Morphogenesis of the Human Filarial Parasite Brugia malayi
T. V. Rajan, Natalia Paciorkowski, Ivo Kalajzic, Carol McGuiness
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Abstract

The nematode parasites Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi, and B. timori cause a disease in humans known as lymphatic filariasis, which afflicts approximately 120 million people worldwide. The parasites enter the human host from the mosquito either as L3 or as infective larvae and subsequently differentiate through 2 molts. In this article, we show that B. malayi depends on an exogenous source of vitamin C to complete the L3 to L4 molt, a critical morphogenic step in its life cycle. Brugia malayi apparently belongs to a small group of living organisms that depend on an exogenous source of vitamin C. This group includes only primates (including man) and guinea pigs among mammals.

T. V. Rajan, Natalia Paciorkowski, Ivo Kalajzic, and Carol McGuiness "Ascorbic Acid Is a Requirement for the Morphogenesis of the Human Filarial Parasite Brugia malayi," Journal of Parasitology 89(4), 868-870, (1 August 2003). https://doi.org/10.1645/GE-3137RN
Published: 1 August 2003
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