Mireia Ferrer

Mireia Ferrer
Vall d'Hebron Research Institute (VHIR) · Statistics and Bioinformatics Unit (UEB)

About

43
Publications
4,237
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875
Citations
Citations since 2017
0 Research Items
509 Citations
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2017201820192020202120222023020406080100
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100

Publications

Publications (43)
Article
Full-text available
In cells, positive strand RNA viruses, such as Retroviridae, must selectively recognize their full-length RNA genome among abundant cellular RNAs to assemble and release particles. How viruses coordinate the intracellular trafficking of both RNA and protein components to the assembly sites of infectious particles at the cell surface remains a long-...
Article
Full-text available
Dimerization is a unique and vital characteristic of retroviral genomes. It is commonly accepted that genomic RNA (gRNA) must be dimeric at the plasma membrane of the infected cells to be packaged during virus assembly. However, where, when and how HIV-1 gRNA find each other and dimerize in the cell are long-standing questions that cannot be answer...
Article
Full-text available
HIV-1, the agent of the AIDS pandemic, is an RNA virus that reverse transcribes its RNA genome (gRNA) into DNA, shortly after its entry into cells. Within cells, retroviral assembly requires thousands of structural Gag proteins and two copies of gRNA as well as cellular factors, which converge to the plasma membrane in a finely regulated timeline....
Article
Full-text available
Eukaryotic cells have evolved stringent proofreading mechanisms to ensure that intron-containing mRNAs do not leave the nucleus. However, all retroviruses must bypass this checkpoint for replication. Indeed, their primary polycistronic transcript (Full-Length) must reach the cytoplasm to be either translated or packaged as genomic RNA in progeny vi...
Article
Full-text available
The lack of a continuous in vitro culture system for blood stages of malarial parasites with a unique tropism for reticulocytes, such as Plasmodium vivax and the Plasmodium yoelii 17X reticulocyte-prone strain, hinders research in these organisms. The maturation of reticulocytes into erythrocytes is a complex process involving the selective removal...
Article
Full-text available
The production of fully functional human red cells in vitro from haematopoietic stem cells (hHSCs) has been successfully achieved. Recently, the use of hHSCs from cord blood represented a major improvement to develop the continuous culture system for Plasmodium vivax. Here, we demonstrated that CD34+hHSCs from peripheral blood and bone marrow can b...
Data
Markers, application, and findings used in the phenotypic in situ characterization and distribution of cells in the spleen of the P. vivax patient. (DOCX)
Article
Full-text available
We report the unique case of a 19-year-old nonimmune patient with Plasmodium vivax monoinfection, confirmed by PCR in the peripheral blood and in the spleen section, who was splenectomized due to spleen rupture two days prior to the diagnosis and treatment of the malarial infection. Microscopic analyses evidenced white pulp expansion and a diffuse...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Severe disease attributable to Plasmodium vivax infection is already well described worldwide; however, autopsies in these patients are scarce. Methods: From 1996 to 2010, 19 patient deaths with a clinical diagnosis of P. vivax infection occurred in a tertiary care center in the Brazilian Amazon. Seventeen of these 19 deaths were ful...
Article
Full-text available
The spleen plays a crucial role in the development of immunity to malaria, but the role of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) in splenic effector cells during malaria infection is poorly understood. In the present study, we analysed the expression of selected PRRs in splenic effector cells from BALB/c mice infected with the lethal and non-lethal...
Article
The advent of intravital microscopy in experimental rodent malaria models has allowed major advances to the knowledge of parasite-host interactions. Thus, in vivo imaging of malaria parasites during pre-erythrocytic stages have revealed the active entrance of parasites into skin lymph nodes, the complete development of the parasite in the skin, and...
Article
The spleen is a complex organ that is perfectly adapted to selectively filtering and destroying senescent red blood cells (RBCs), infectious microorganisms and Plasmodium-parasitized RBCs. Infection by malaria is the most common cause of spleen rupture and splenomegaly, albeit variably, a landmark of malaria infection. Here, the role of the spleen...
Article
The subcellular localization and function of variant subtelomeric multigene families in Plasmodium vivax remain vastly unknown. Among them, the vir superfamily is putatively involved in antigenic variation and in mediating adherence to endothelial receptors. In the absence of a continuous in vitro culture system for P. vivax, we have generated P. f...
Data
Immunization with exosomes from 17X-infected reticulocytes modulated the course of P. yoelii 17XL infection. (A) Survival curve, (B) time-course parasitaemia (mean±SD), (C) percentages of infected reticulocytes and (D) reticulocytosis after 5×105 P. yoelii 17XL infections of groups of BALB/c mice previously immunized intravenously (i.v.) with 5 µg...
Data
Mouse proteins identified in exosomes derived from mice infected with non-lethal strain of Plasmodium yoelii 17X. (DOC)
Data
Detailed information about peptide Identification of proteins from exosomes derived from mice infected with non-lethal strain of Plasmodium yoelii 17X. (XLS)
Article
Full-text available
Exosomes are 30-100-nm membrane vesicles of endocytic origin that are released after the fusion of multivesicular bodies (MVBs) with the plasma membrane. While initial studies suggested that the role of exosomes was limited to the removal of proteins during the maturation of reticulocytes to erythrocytes, recent studies indicate that they are produ...
Article
Full-text available
It is generally accepted that Plasmodium vivax, the most widely distributed human malaria parasite, causes mild disease and that this species does not sequester in the deep capillaries of internal organs. Recent evidence, however, has demonstrated that there is severe disease, sometimes resulting in death, exclusively associated with P. vivax and t...
Article
Full-text available
Knowledge of the dynamic features of the processes driven by malaria parasites in the spleen is lacking. To gain insight into the function and structure of the spleen in malaria, we have implemented intravital microscopy and magnetic resonance imaging of the mouse spleen in experimental infections with non-lethal (17X) and lethal (17XL) Plasmodium...
Article
Full-text available
The lack of efficient viral vectors has delayed intestine-directed gene therapy. Enteric adenovirus Ad40 and Ad41 are associated with gastroenteritis in children, but they are fastidious adenovirus. It has been postulated that Ad40 tropism as well as virus replication and trafficking through mucus layer depends to some extent on the short fiber. Th...
Article
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