Abstract

The effect of various body temperatures, encountered during malaria fever, on the synthesis of Plasmodium falciparum heat-shock protein called PFHSP70-I and parasite growth rates among five different isolates are described. The results show that after the exposure of parasites at 39°C for 30 min the amount of PFHSP70-I in all five isolates increased markedly and significantly, whereas parasite growth rates and the amount of total blood stage antigens remained almost unaffected. This indicates that the PFHSP70-I gene responds to heat-shock by producing higher amounts of PFHSP70-I protein, presumably to protect the parasite from being killed during malaria fever.

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