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Stopping Malaria By Immunizing Mosquitoes

RedEaredSlider writes "Millions of people in the tropics suffer from malaria, a mosquito-borne disease that has been difficult to treat and which costs many developing countries millions of dollars per year in lost productivity. Up to now, efforts at controlling it have focused on attacking the parasites that cause it, keeping mosquitoes from biting, or killing the insects. But at Johns Hopkins University, Rhoel Dinglasan, an entomologist and biologist, decided to try another tack: immunizing mosquitoes. When a mosquito bites an infected human, it takes up some of the gametocytes. They aren't dangerous to people at that stage. Since plasmodium is vulnerable there, that is the point Dinglasan chose to attack. A mosquito's gut has certain receptor molecules in it that the plasmodium can bind to. Dinglasan asked what would happen if the parasite couldn't 'see' them, which would happen if another molecule, some antigen, were binding to those receptors."

3 of 100 comments (clear)

  1. Call Jenny McCarthy by PvtVoid · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Think of the autistic mosquitoes!

  2. Re:good luck with that by cindyann · · Score: 0, Redundant

    patience

    English is tough stuff.

  3. Re:good luck with that by icebike · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Not to belabor the obvious, but who said anything about injections?

    Immunization does not require injections.
    Can we stop now? Please?

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