<strike id="gegfc"><dl id="gegfc"></dl></strike>
<sub id="gegfc"></sub>

    <mark id="gegfc"></mark>

      Scientists take step forward in malaria vaccine using parasite mapping technique

      Source: Xinhua| 2018-06-28 11:15:05|Editor: ZD
      Video PlayerClose

      SYDNEY, June 28 (Xinhua) -- Australian scientists on Thursday said they have taken a crucial step toward in developing a new malaria vaccine by using a novel "atomic-scale" blueprint to track how the parasite invades human cells.

      "With this unprecedented level of detail, we can now begin to design new therapies that specifically target and disrupt the parasite's invasion machinery, preventing malaria parasites from hijacking human red blood cells to spread through the blood and, ultimately, be transmitted to others," Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research Associate Professor Wai-Hong Tham said in a statement. Her team's discovery was published in scientific journal Nature.

      The researchers' work involves using Nobel Prize-winning microscopy technology to map previously hidden first contact between the Plasmodium vivax malaria parasites and young red blood cells they invade that marks the start of the parasites' spread throughout the body, according to the research.

      The "essential step in the malaria lifecycle is the beginning of the classical symptoms associated with malaria - fever, chills, malaise, diarrhoea and vomiting - which can last weeks or even longer," it said.

      The Plasmodium vivax is the most widespread malaria parasite worldwide and the predominant cause of the major scourge in the vast majority of countries outside Africa, according to the institute.

      The parasite's "propensity to 'hide' undetected by the immune system in a person's liver" also makes it "the number one parasite responsible for recurrent malaria infections."

      The scientists, guided by their mapping technique, "was able to tease out the precise details of the parasite-host interaction, identifying its most vulnerable spots," said Tham, adding that they have "now identified the molecular machinery that would be the best target" for an anti-malarial vaccine against the widest range of the parasites.

      TOP STORIES
      EDITOR’S CHOICE
      MOST VIEWED
      EXPLORE XINHUANET
      010020070750000000000000011100001372865031
      中文字幕日韩无线码在线一区_制服肉丝亚洲中文字幕_日韩欧美无砖专区一中文字目_国产精品点击进入在线影院高清
      <strike id="gegfc"><dl id="gegfc"></dl></strike>
      <sub id="gegfc"></sub>
      
      
        <mark id="gegfc"></mark>
          中文字幕在线中文乱码不卡24 | 亚洲成aV人片在线播放一二区 | 一级中文字幕在线播放 | 一本久久a久久精品综合夜夜 | 亚洲h在线播放在线观看h | 日韩精品一区二区三区在线观看l |