T cell responses in the brain during experimental cerebral malaria infection
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Professor Scott Mueller+61 3 8344 9044
Project Details
Activated CD8 T cells play a critical role in murine experimental cerebral malaria associated with Plasmodium berghei infection. The mechanism underlying cerebral malaria pathogenesis is not well understood. To address this, we have developed a novel system to image the brain in live animals undergoing malarial infection using 2-photon laser scanning microscopy (Figure 1). This allows temporal assessment of the immune response occurring in the brain. Using tools including TCR transgenic mice generated by the Heath group, we are examining the role of malaria-specific CD8 T cells in disease.
Movie 1: Dynamic migration of CD8+ T cells in the brain after Plasmodium berghei infection. Antigen-specific pBT-I CD8+ T cells (red) migrating within brain blood vessels (blue) during infection with GFP-expressing parasites (green).
Research Group
Mueller laboratory: Visualising the immune system in action
Faculty Research Themes
School Research Themes
Cellular Imaging & Structural Biology
Key Contact
For further information about this research, please contact the research group leader.
Department / Centre
MDHS Research library
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