Scientists may have discovered how to develop a vaccine to beat the killer disease malaria
Published:
23 December 2003 y., Tuesday
Scientists may have discovered how to develop a vaccine to beat the killer disease malaria, it was revealed today.
Biologists have found a genetic mutation that provides resistance to the disease in people from Papua New Guinea. It is hoped that the findings can be adapted to develop a vaccine to the virus, which kills up to two million people a year.
The team of scientists at the University of Edinburgh found that the Papua New Guineans were protected against severe malaria as they lack a sticky protein called complement receptor one (CR1).
In many blood samples from children with severe malaria, the malaria parasite sticks to the surrounding red blood cells.
This phenomenon, known as “rosetting”, is much less common in children with milder forms of the illness. The Edinburgh team, led by Dr Alex Rowe, decided to investigate the phenomenon more closely with funding from the Wellcome Trust and UK Medical Research Council.
His previous work has shown that the parasite was sticking to a protein on the human red blood cell CR1.
The latest results were striking, as almost all the people tested were deficient in CR1.
Šaltinis:
scotsman.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
There was no report of any severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) case in the 24 hours
more »
A simple blood test could in the future be used to detect breast cancer, a disease which affects 10 percent of women in the Western world
more »
A simple blood test could detect early signs of deadly 'asbestos cancer', scientists have claimed
more »
Eastern Europe is actively preparing to fight the greatest plague of our times-the HIV virus and AIDS
more »
A powerful Antarctic storm has helped split apart an iceberg the size of Jamaica, a New Zealand scientist said Tuesday
more »
Predicting Space Weather Becomes More Precise
more »
American Astranout Edward Lu, Russia's Yuri Malenchenko and Spain's Pedro Duque, have touched down safely in Kazakhstan.
more »
New Drug Promising for Advanced Breast Cancer
more »
New imported whooping cough vaccine makes Finnish production unfeasible
more »
Europe and Central Asia has fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemic in the world
more »