Friday, May 23, 2014

Blood from a rare group of children immune to malaria

Scientists find rare group of children who are naturally immune to malariaBlood from a rare group of children from Tanzania, found to be naturally immune to malaria has now helped scientists take a giant leap in developing a vaccine against the world's deadliest vector borne disease — malaria.

Researchers from the Brown University School of Medicine have found that these children produce an antibody that attacks the malaria-causing parasite. Antibody is an infection-fighting protein produced by our immune system when it detects harmful substances.

Injecting a form of this antibody into mice protected the animals from the disease. Scientists say these antibodies would ultimately reveal the Achilles heel of malaria and help create the elusive vaccine.

This same principle has been used over the years in the work to create the world's first HIV vaccine. Globally, scientists have been trying to identify volunteers belonging to a rare group of HIV infected patients who stay healthy for years without requiring life-saving antiretroviral treatment (ART). The antibodies in their blood has been found to bar HIV from entering their blood cells and replicating, thereby progressing into AIDS.

Prof Jake Kurtis from the University screened 1,000 children in Tanzania, who had regular blood samples taken in the first years of their lives. Around 6% of these children were found to have developed a naturally acquired immunity to malaria, despite living in an area where the disease was highly active.

Scientists then looked into their blood and found a unique antibody that dealt a deadly blow to the malaria parasite at a key stage in its life-cycle. It trapped the tiny organism in red blood cells, preventing it from bursting out and spreading throughout the body.

Prof Kurtis said, "We asked what were the specific antibodies expressed by resistant children that were not expressed by susceptible children. Tests, carried out in small groups of mice, suggest this antibody could act as a potential vaccine. The survival rate was over two-fold longer if the mice were vaccinated compared to unvaccinated - and the parasitemia (the number of parasites in the blood) were up to four-fold lower in the vaccinated mice". Dr Kurtis and Dipak Raj of Brown University and Rhode Island Hospital have named their antibody PfSEA-1.

Dr Kurtis said, "PfSEA-1 was discovered by starting with naturally occurring protective human immune responses. Using molecular gymnastics, we identified parasite proteins that are only recognized by antibodies in children who were resistant to malaria but not by antibodies in susceptible children. We subsequently demonstrated that vaccination with one of these proteins, SEA-1 could protect mice from a lethal malaria infection. More importantly, in our cohort of over 750 children, kids who made antibodies to PfSEA-1 did not develop severe malaria, while children without these antibodies were susceptible to this severe complication".

"PfSEA-1 is essential to allow the parasite to escape from one infected red blood cell and infect additional blood cells. This cycle of expansion in red blood cells is critical for parasite survival and is the key process that leads to morbidity and mortality in humans. Using molecular techniques, we decreased the amount of PfSEA-1 that parasites could produce and demonstrated that these altered parasites had a significant growth defect. More importantly, antibodies to PfSEAs prevent the parasites from escaping from red blood cells, presumably by interfering with the function of PfSEA-1."

According to Dr Kurtis, there are three major areas for further study. "First, we need to understand the role that PfSEA-1 plays in the process of parasite egress from red blood cells. Cellular immunity is critical for long-lived antibody responses, but detailed analysis of cellular responses requires fresh blood samples, thus we are currently planning to enroll new cohorts in east Africa to address this question. We also need to move PfSEA-1-based vaccines into nonhuman primate challenge trials using human-use approved vaccine adjuvants. Following successful nonhuman primate studies, Phase I safety trials in humans can begin," he said.

The most recent figures from the World Health Organization suggest the disease killed more than 600,000 people in 2012, with 90% of these deaths occurring in sub-Saharan Africa.

google plans cloud based wifi network

Google plans cloud-based Wi-Fi networkFor a company like Google, which can grow only if users have access to easy, fast and cheap web connections, one of the biggest problems is the poor internet infrastructure across the world. The company is trying to solve this problem by creating its own internet infrastructure, including building a Wi-Fi network that will be managed through cloud-computing technologies.

According to a report in GigaOM, a website that covers technology news, Google has partnered with Ruckus Wireless to create a cloud-based WiFi network for small and medium size companies. The network can launch as early as "this summer".

According to the report, Google and Ruckus are building a Wi-Fi infrastructure that will allow any small installation - like a pizza shop or a dentist's office - to join the network and connect to hundreds or even hundreds of thousands other small businesses to offer people a universal Wi-Fi zone. The businesses will have to buy their own Wi-Fi gear - probably made by Ruckus - and bandwidth to connect to the Google's network. But once they are connected, the Wi-Fi access on their network would be remotely controlled by Google's cloud service.

Joining the network will be free for businesses.

For businesses, this would give them two benefits: One, they would be able to get a better analysis of how their Wi-Fi is used. Two, their consumers will not have to connect again and again to different businesses. Once they connect to the Wi-Fi in the coffee shop that is part of the Google network, their smartphones will automatically connect to the Wi-Fi when they enter the Pizza shop, which too is using Google's Wi-Fi network.

If successful, Google can create nation-wide or even global Wi-Fi network.

While initially, the bandwidth for Google's Wi-Fi network will be supplied by businesses, it is possible that in future Google may merge the network with a few technologies it is testing. Google is working on enabling internet access in remote areas through high-altitude balloons and drones. If successfully, the company may beam bandwidth for its Wi-Fi network through strategically placed balloons or drones.

Google also offers 1Gbps fibre connections in several US cities. The company may also use the bandwidth from its fibre lines for the cloud-based Wi-Fi network in future. 
source: toi