About this Research Topic
This Research Topic aims to spark discussion around popular spontaneous articles from 2021 in Parasite Immunology. The Parasite Immunology field is continuously evolving, therefore we are seeking to understand developments and perspectives on articles that have attracted attention throughout the year.
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The chosen manuscripts are :
- Promising Technologies in the Field of Helminth Vaccines
- Parasite-Derived Excretory-Secretory Products Alleviate Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis and Improve Cognitive Impairment Induced by a High-Fat Diet
- Eosinophils and Neutrophils Eliminate Migrating Strongyloides ratti Larvae at the Site of Infection in the Context of Extracellular DNA Trap Formation
- Resistance Against Leishmania major Infection Depends on Microbiota-Guided Macrophage Activation
- Transcriptome Analysis of Host Inflammatory Responses to the Ectoparasitic Mite Sarcoptes scabiei var. hominis
- β2-Adrenergic Receptor Enhances the Alternatively Activated Macrophages and Promotes Biliary Injuries Caused by Helminth Infection
- Tuft Cells Increase Following Ovine Intestinal Parasite Infections and Define Evolutionarily Conserved and Divergent Responses
- Purinergic Enhancement of Anti-Leishmanial Effector Functions of Neutrophil Granulocytes
- Timing of Transcriptomic Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell Responses of Sheep to Fasciola hepatica Infection Differs From Those of Cattle, Reflecting Different Disease Phenotypes
- Eosinophils Suppress the Migration of T Cells Into the Brain of Plasmodium berghei-Infected Ifnar1-/- Mice and Protect Them From Experimental Cerebral Malaria
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This topic will be summarized by the specialty chief editors in an editorial alongside their vision for Parasite Immunology.
We welcome Opinions, Perspectives, Hypotheses and Theory, and Mini-Review article types to facilitate this discussion. Please note only papers that are relevant and add a significant contribution to the discussion articles will be considered.
Keywords: A year in review: Discussions in Parasite Immunology
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.