The pathogenic protists that infect humans are all single-celled organisms, formerly called ‘protozoa’. They are responsible for a range of diseases, including:
The following activity describes the life cycle, impact and prevention strategies against the most widespread infectious disease caused by a protist – malaria.
Allow about 10 minutes for this activity.
The protists that cause malaria belong to the genus Plasmodium [plazz-moh-dee-umm]. Study their life cycle in Figure 35 and then answer the questions below the diagram.
How are the protists that cause malaria transmitted to a new human host?
When an infected mosquito bites someone to take a blood meal, protists in the mosquito’s saliva get into the person’s bloodstream.
How do the protists get into the mosquito’s saliva?
When the mosquito sucks blood from an infected person or animal, the protists are drawn into the mosquito’s gut from there they migrate to its salivary glands.
Which human cells are routinely invaded by malaria protists?
Liver cells and red blood cells. (The protists are less than 5 micrometres (µm) in diameter at this stage – small enough to get into a red blood cell.)
OpenLearn - Infection and immunity
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