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Reproduction And Gene Shuffling in Malaria Parasites: How Does It Work?

malaria

Scientists from the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester have received nearly £600,000 to research how sexual development and gene shuffling within the malaria parasite could help to control malaria transmission.

Led by Professor Rita Tewari (University of Nottingham) and Dr David Guttery (University of Leicester), the research will focus on the molecular players involved in the development and transmission of the malaria parasite – one of the biggest killers in the world.

This is a unique type of cell division in sexual cells in malaria parasites, which happens during a process called meiosis. Meiosis is a fundamental process for all sexual organisms that enables them to generate sex cells (i.e. sperm and egg cells) that then go on to fertilise and reshuffle their genes, ultimately generating off-spring.

This research could potentially uncover new targets for therapies to control the spread of malaria in animals and humans.

Dr David Guttery, University of Leicester

Dr David Guttery said: “We know that the malaria parasite shuffles genes during sexual reproduction (termed gene recombination), but what we don’t know is how it works. The funding we have received will open the door for us to discover this, and to potentially uncover new targets for therapies to control the spread of this devastating disease.”

Professor Rita Tewari said: “To understand the basic machinery of cell division in malaria parasites, especially during the sexual stages of transmission, is crucial to stopping the parasite in its tracks. Controlling the transmission of this devastating disease is as important as the disease itself. We have seen this in the case of COVID.”

The research has been funded from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and will include collaborators at the University of Leicester (Dr James Higgins), University of Nottingham (Dr Stephen Gray and Professor Levi Yant), the Francis Crick Institute (Dr Tony Holder), University of Oxford (Professors David Ferguson and Sue Vaughan) and University of Warwick (Dr Andrew Bottrill).

This study will complement Professor Tewari’s research on cell division in male sex cells as part of a £2.5 million European Research Council grant. To address some of the questions on meiosis, collaborators at the University of Nottingham, University of Leicester, Francis Crick Institute and University of Groningen offer their insights into Plasmodium meiosis, published in Trends in Parasitology.

The researchers highlight the process of meiosis and how it is so different in malaria parasites and discuss state-of-the-art technologies that could be used to solve the mystery of how meiosis and gene shuffling in the malaria parasite works, which could significantly and positively impact both human and animal health in the future.

Source: University of Nottingham

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