A new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health sheds light on how the blood-borne parasite that causes African sleeping sickness in humans and related diseases in cattle and other animals establishes long-term infections in hosts. Using a mouse model, the researchers showed thatTrypanosoma brucei essentially plays a game of hide-and-seek by setting up shop in its hosts’ tissues, allowing it to constantly change its protective surface coat and evade antibodies.
Your privacy is our priority
- Hosted on Secure cloud-based hosting
- SOC II Type 1
- HIPAA compliant
- 2FA authentication
- End-to-end data encryption
- Your health data will not be sold or used without your consent. Ever.