Connect with us

News

Scientists Make Genetic Breakthrough in Malaria Treatment

Published

on

Shanghai — Scientists have discovered the key gene behind severe malaria, a finding that may provide new strategies for the treatment and prevention of the disease.

The discovery, published in Nature magazine on Sunday by experts from China, France, Denmark and Germany, pointed out that the antigenic variation of the Plasmodium falciparum multicopy var gene family is the key gene linked to severe malaria. It found that expression of a particular var subgroup called “upsA,” is what causes human cerebral malaria, a severe malaria.

According to Professor Zhang Qingfeng, one of the researchers involved in the project, a novel chromatin-associated exoribonuclease termed “PfRNase II” controls the silencing of upsA var genes. The scientists observed an inverse relationship between transcript levels of PfRNase II and upsA-type var genes, which implied a key role of PfRNase II in severe malaria.

The finding is expected to provide clues for the development of the vaccines and medicine against severe malaria, which will help save a great number of patients, particularly children under the age of five.

Malaria is one of the oldest infectious diseases. Severe malaria claims the lives of about one million people in the world annually. (PNA/Xinhua) CTB/UTB

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Comments

Subscribe

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement

Ads Blocker Image Powered by Code Help Pro

It looks like you are using an adblocker

Please consider allowing ads on our site. We rely on these ads to help us grow and continue sharing our content.

OK
Powered By
Best Wordpress Adblock Detecting Plugin | CHP Adblock