Sowetan

Breakthrou­gh in fight against malaria parasite

Scientists pinpoint core genes essential for deadliest mosquitoes

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London – Scientists have identified the core genes that are essential for the deadliest malaria parasite to survive, revealing new targets for drugs or vaccines to fight the potentiall­y deadly disease they cause in people.

Using new genomic techniques to analyse the parasite’s genes, researcher­s from Britain’s Wellcome Sanger Institute and the University of South Florida (USF) were able to determine which ones are indispensa­ble.

World Health Organisati­on (WHO) data show that 216 million people were infected last year with the malaria parasite, which is transmitte­d by blood-sucking anopheles mosquitoes.

Nearly half a million people – most of them babies and children in Africa – died from the disease in 2016.

One type of the malaria parasite, known as plasmodium falciparum, or P falciparum, causes half of all malaria cases and about 90% of the deaths.

The Sanger and USF researcher­s, whose work was published in the journal Science, analysed almost every one of this parasite’s 5 400 genes. They used a specialise­d technique called piggyBac-transposon insertiona­l mutagenesi­s to inactivate genes at random, and then developed new DNA sequencing technology to identify which genes were affected. Their results showed that about half the parasite’s genes – more than 2 600 – were essential for it to grow in red blood cells.

“Using our genetic analysis tools, we [were] able to determine the relative importance of each gene for parasite survival,” said John Adams, a specialist in global health and infectious disease research at USF.

Malaria is a treatable disease if it is caught early, but current antimalari­al drugs are failing in many areas due to drug resistance.

“We need new drug targets against malaria, now more than ever,” said Julian Rayner, a Sanger expert who co-led the research.

“This gives a list of 2 680 essential genes that researcher­s can prioritise as promising possible drug targets.” –

‘‘ We need new drug targets against [disease]

 ?? /REUTERS ?? A woman comforts her son who is suffering from malaria as they wait for treatment at a Medecins Sans Frontieres-run clinic in South Sudan.
/REUTERS A woman comforts her son who is suffering from malaria as they wait for treatment at a Medecins Sans Frontieres-run clinic in South Sudan.

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