Friday, 05 June 2026

 

 

LATEST NEWS Harpal Singh Cheema Chairs PSTC Review Meeting Narendra Modi inaugurates, lays foundation of development projects worth Rs 18,800 crore in Surat Aman Arora Distributes Sanction Letters Worth Rs 2.50 Crore for 69 Development Works in 43 Villages Bhagwant Mann government to expedite ‘Rangla Punjab Development Scheme’ with strict timeline and accountability says Harpal Singh Cheema Jai Krishan Singh Rouri Resolves Public Grievances on the Spot During Public Meeting Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu calls upon people to make environmental protection a mass movement Nayab Singh Saini Appeals to Citizens to Plant at Least One Tree on World Environment Day Haryana to Lead Horticulture and Agri-Business Revolution Just as it Led the Green Revolution says Nayab Singh Saini Amit Shah Visits Tripura Border, Unveils Smart Border Vision Dr. Jitendra Singh Launches India's Seventh Regional Meteorological Centre in Jammu Sharvari Explores Punjabi Roots in ‘Main Vapas Aaunga’ Building a Food-Secure Future : Synchronizing Policy & Plate Adarsh Swasthya Sansthans soon to be equipped with x-ray, ultrasound machines says Dr Dhani Ram Shandil Narendra Modi plants sapling on World Environment Day, reviews projects in Surat 'Namo Oxygen Parks' open : Rekha Gupta vows plantation of 15 lakh saplings 54 LPU Students secured ₹5 Crore+ in Bharti Airtel Scholarships, Led 180 Sapling Plantation Drive on World Environment Day State Govt. signs MoU with UNDP to advance climate-resilient, inclusive and sustainable development Nitin Nabin appeals countrymen to participate in 'Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam' campaign on World Environment Day Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu launches first phase of Chinar plantation drive JP Nadda leads plantation drive in Shillong on World Environment Day Sunflower Growers Get Fresh Window as Haryana Reopens Procurement Portal for 60 Days

 

Why malaria vax quickly loses its protective effect

Health, Study, London, Research, Researchers, World News, Malaria, Malaria Vaccine

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

London , 19 Jun 2022

Last updated on: Jun 19, 2022, 00:00 IST

Scientists have found that T helper cells offer little protection against malarial infections, to which people in endemic areas are constantly exposed.Despite impressive successes in controlling malaria, more than 600,000 people worldwide still die from the tropical disease every year, according to the World Health Organization.

The vast majority of fatal cases of malaria are caused by the pathogen plasmodium falciparum. To date, there is only one approved vaccine against this single-celled organism, and its efficacy, which is already rather low, does not last long.

A team from the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ) studied the human immune response after immunisation with plasmodium falciparum. Their goal was to find out against which protein components the T helper cells induced in this way are directed.

To their surprise, the T helper cells reacted exclusively to the protein sequence of the vaccine strain and showed hardly any cross-reactivity with the naturally occurring pathogen variants. This could explain why the effect of the vaccination available to date lasts only a short time.

"To improve the vaccine, we need to understand which protective antibodies are induced by the immunisation. But the production of such antibodies depends to a large extent on help from the so-called follicular T helper cells," said Hedda Wardemann of the German Cancer Research Center.

"They ensure that B cells transform into antibody-producing plasma cells and memory B cells," Wardemann added.The vaccine is directed against CSP, the quantitatively dominant protein on the surface of the "sporozoites".

Sporozoites are the stage of the malaria pathogen which is transmitted with the bite of the mosquito and enters human blood.To study the T helper cell response against CSP in detail, the team examined the blood of volunteers infected with killed P. falciparum sporozoites from the vaccine strain.

In particular, they focused their investigation on which sequences of CSP are recognised by the receptors of the T helper cells.The analyses revealed that the T-cell receptors mainly targeted amino acids 311 to 333 of the CSP.

But in another observation they found virtually no cross-reactivity between the individual T-cell clones."The receptors highly specifically bind only the CSP epitopes of the vaccine strain used. 

Even deviations of only a single amino acid component were not tolerated in some cases," Wardemann explained, in the paper published in Science Immunology.

The immunologist points out that in the natural population of P. falciparum, sequence polymorphisms occur to a high degree in this region of the CSP.

"The specificity of the T-cell clones prevents the constantly recurring natural infections with the pathogen from acting as a natural 'booster'. This could possibly explain why the protective effect of the malaria vaccine wears off so quickly," Wardemann said.

The researcher recommends that further development of the vaccine should test whether inducing a broader spectrum of T helper cells could generate longer-lasting immune protection.

 

Tags: Health , Study , London , Research , Researchers , World News , Malaria , Malaria Vaccine

 

 

related news

 

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2026 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD