10 Papers
69 Citations
A. Berry is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmodium vivax & Matrix (mathematics). The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications.
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Papers
Diversity, host switching and evolution of Plasmodium vivax infecting African great apes.
Franck Prugnolle,Virginie Rougeron,Pierre Becquart,A. Berry,Boris Makanga,Nil Rahola,Céline Arnathau,Barthélémy Ngoubangoye,Sandie Menard,Eric Willaume,Francisco J. Ayala,Didier Fontenille,Benjamin Ollomo,Patrick Durand,Christophe Paupy,François Renaud +15 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the P. vivax sequences from parasites of great apes form a clade genetically distinct from the parasites circulating in humans, and that this clade’s parasites can be infectious to humans by describing the case of a traveler returning from the Central African Republic infected with one of them.
Laboratory-based surveillance for Cryptosporidium in France, 2006-2009.
Karine Guyot,Francis Derouin,Patrice Agnamey,Adela Angoulvant,Dominique Aubert,Christine Aznar,Didier Basset,Pascal Beaudeau,G. Belkadi,A. Berry,Alain Bonnin,Françoise Botterel,Marie-Elisabeth Bougnoux,Patrice Bourée,Pierre Buffet,M. Cambon,Bernard Carme,Gabriela Certad,C. Chartier,B. Couprie,Frédéric Dalle,Eric Dannaoui,Marie-Laure Dardé,E. Dei Cas,B. Degeilh,N. Desbois,Jean-Marc Dewitte,Chantal Duhamel,Thanh Hai Duong,Jean Dupouy-Camet,Alexandra Faussart,Loïc Favennec,Pierre Flori,Nausicaa Gantois,Gilles Gargala,Frédéric Grenouillet,Ml Grillot,D. Haouchine,Sandrine Houzé +38 more
TL;DR: From January 2006 to December 2009, 407 cryptosporidiosis cases were notified in France and 364 specimens were collected, representing the first multisite report of laboratory-confirmed cases of cryptosporaidiosis in France.
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African monkeys are infected by Plasmodium falciparum nonhuman primate-specific strains
Franck Prugnolle,Benjamin Ollomo,Patrick Durand,Erhan Yalcindag,Céline Arnathau,Eric Elguero,A. Berry,Xavier Pourrut,Jean-Paul Gonzalez,Dieudonné Nkoghe,Jean Akiana,Delphine Verrier,Eric M. Leroy,Francisco J. Ayala,François Renaud +14 more
TL;DR: Examination of the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes of this parasite reveals that it is specific of nonhuman primates, indicating that P. falciparum-related pathogens can naturally circulate in some monkey populations in Africa.
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