close Icon

Malaria parasites do the stick-and-slip shuffle.

Gilson PR

VIEW FULL ARTICLE
  • Journal Cell host & microbe

  • Published 01 Feb 2010

  • Volume 6

  • ISSUE 6

  • Pagination 499-501

  • DOI 10.1016/j.chom.2009.11.011

Abstract

Münter et al. (2009) demonstrate that malaria parasite movement is highly complex, involving cycles of fast sprints and slow glides over their substrate. This "stick-and-slip shuffle" is controlled by the parasite's secreted adhesive proteins and their interaction with the dynamic actin cytoskeleton.