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Theories on malarial pigment formation and quinoline action
David J. Sullivan
Bloomberg School of Public Health
Research output
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Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
154
Scopus citations
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Agriculture & Biology
quinoline
84%
heme
67%
pigments
47%
Plasmodium
36%
crystals
28%
vacuoles
21%
malaria
16%
histidine
15%
quinolines
13%
proteins
13%
iron
11%
Haemoproteus
10%
heme proteins
10%
parasites
10%
crystal proteins
10%
chloroquine
10%
antimalarials
9%
Schistosoma
9%
Plasmodium falciparum
9%
lysosomes
8%
X-ray diffraction
7%
Protozoa
7%
chemistry
7%
spectroscopy
6%
proteomics
6%
X-radiation
6%
Culicidae
6%
hemoglobin
6%
biochemical pathways
6%
reactive oxygen species
6%
oxygen
5%
clones
5%
drugs
5%
molecular weight
4%
metabolism
4%
amino acids
4%
lipids
4%
extracts
4%
Medicine & Life Sciences
hemozoin
100%
quinoline
89%
Heme
55%
Plasmodium
29%
Vacuoles
19%
histidine-rich proteins
19%
heme polymerase
13%
Quinolines
10%
Iron
10%
Parasites
10%
Infrared Rays
9%
Acidic Amino Acids
9%
Proteins
9%
Schistosoma
8%
Biosynthetic Pathways
7%
X-Ray Diffraction
7%
Chloroquine
7%
Antimalarials
6%
Life Cycle Stages
6%
Culicidae
6%
Plasmodium falciparum
6%
Lysosomes
6%
Spectrum Analysis
6%
Human Body
6%
Proteomics
5%
Drug Resistance
5%
Malaria
5%
Molecular Weight
5%
Psychological Inhibition
5%
Hemoglobins
5%
Reactive Oxygen Species
5%
Clone Cells
4%
X-Rays
4%
Oxygen
4%
Lipids
4%