P
Patrick M. Lelliott
Researcher at Osaka University
Publications - 20
Citations - 316
Patrick M. Lelliott is an academic researcher from Osaka University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrophil extracellular traps & Plasmodium chabaudi. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 233 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick M. Lelliott include Australian School of Advanced Medicine & Australian National University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The influence of host genetics on erythrocytes and malaria infection: is there therapeutic potential?
TL;DR: Novel findings include the reliance of the parasite on the host enzyme ferrochelatase, and the discovery of basigin and CD55 as obligate erythrocyte receptors for parasite invasion.
Journal ArticleDOI
A flow cytometric assay to quantify invasion of red blood cells by rodent Plasmodium parasites in vivo
TL;DR: The invasion assay presented here is a versatile method for the study of in vivo red cell invasion efficiency of Plasmodium parasites in mice, and allows direct comparison of invasion in red cells derived from two different populations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparative population genomics reveals key barriers to dispersal in Southern Ocean penguins
Gemma V. Clucas,Gemma V. Clucas,Gemma V. Clucas,Jane L. Younger,Jane L. Younger,Damian Kao,Louise Emmerson,Colin Southwell,Barbara Wienecke,Alex Rogers,Charles-André Bost,Gary Miller,Gary Miller,Michael J. Polito,Patrick M. Lelliott,Jonathan Handley,Sarah Crofts,Richard A. Phillips,Michael J. Dunn,Karen Miller,Tom Hart +20 more
TL;DR: This work used a comparative framework and genomewide data obtained through RAD‐Seq to compare the patterns of connectivity among breeding colonies for five penguin species with shared ancestry, overlapping distributions and differing ecological niches, allowing an examination of the intrinsic and extrinsic barriers governing dispersal patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI
Plasmodium products persist in the bone marrow and promote chronic bone loss.
Michelle Sue Jann Lee,Kenta Maruyama,Yukiko Fujita,Aki Konishi,Patrick M. Lelliott,Sawako Itagaki,Toshihiro Horii,Jing-wen Lin,Jing-wen Lin,Shahid M. Khan,Etsushi Kuroda,Shizuo Akira,Ken Ishii,Cevayir Coban +13 more
TL;DR: It is found that malaria causes bone loss and growth retardation as a result of chronic bone inflammation induced by Plasmodium products, suggesting that combining bone therapies with antimalarial drugs may prevent bone loss in infected individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI
Proliferation of East Antarctic Adélie penguins in response to historical deglaciation
Jane L. Younger,Jane L. Younger,Louise Emmerson,Colin Southwell,Patrick M. Lelliott,Patrick M. Lelliott,Karen Miller,Karen Miller +7 more
TL;DR: The population trajectory of Adélie penguins during the last glacial-interglacial transition was investigated to determine how the species was affected by climate warming over millennia, and deglaciation appears to have been the key driver of population change over millennia.