par Vanhamme, Luc ;Pays, Etienne ;McCulloch, R;Barry, J D
Référence Trends in parasitology, 17, 7, page (338-343)
Publication Publié, 2001-07
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : African trypanosomes can spend a long time in the blood of their mammalian host, where they are exposed to the immune system and are thought to take advantage of it to modulate their own numbers. Their major immunogenic protein is the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG), the gene for which must be in one of the 20--40 specialized telomeric expression sites in order to be transcribed. Trypanosomes escape antibody-mediated destruction through periodic changes of the expressed VSG gene from a repertoire of approximately 1000. How do trypanosomes exclusively express only one VSG and how do they switch between them?