The route all strains of the most deadly malaria parasite use to enter red blood cells has been identified by researchers at the Sanger Institute in Cambridge.
The scientists involved said the finding offered "great hope" for the development of a vaccine, which had the potential to be hugely effective.
Other experts said they were surprised and impressed.
Malaria affects 300 million people each year.
One million die, mostly children in sub-Saharan Africa.
There are many malaria parasites. Plasmodium falciparum is the most deadly and researchers at the Sanger Institute acknowledge it as a "very complex and cunning foe".
It is exceptionally good at evading and bamboozling the immune system. Within five minutes of being bitten by a malaria-carrying mosquito, the parasite is already hiding inside the liver.
It then emerges from the liver at a different stage in its life cycle and infects red blood cells, where it starts reproducing.
Difficulty
The human immune system struggles to build up resistance to malaria and researchers have struggled in the laboratory.
There is still no approved vaccine against malaria. Large scale trials of the most advanced prototype - RTS,S - showed it halved the risk of getting malaria.
This study, published in Nature, looked at the moment the parasite infected a red blood cell.
They were looking for proteins on the surface of Plasmodium and red blood cells which were necessary for the parasite to identify its target and invade.
Others had been found before, but none were universally used.
The team at the Sanger Institute discovered that "basigin", a receptor on the surface on red blood cells, and "PfRh5", a protein on the parasite, were crucial.
In all strains of Plasmodium falciparum tested so far, interrupting the link protected the blood cells from attack.
One of the researchers, Dr Julian Rayner, said: "We were able to completely block invasion using multiple different methods, using antibodies targeting this interaction we could stop all invasion of red blood cells.
"It seems to be essential for invasion."
The plan is to develop a vaccine which will prime the immune system to attack PfRh5 on the parasite
Fellow researcher Dr Gavin Wright said a vaccine would have great potential as the target was so essential.
"As a starting point for developing a vaccine you couldn't hope for better," he said.
Prof Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute at Oxford University, said that after 25 years studying malaria he was "surprised" and "intrigued" by the findings.
He said textbooks and academic research suggested that if you blocked one pathway into the red blood cells, the parasite would choose another.
He added: "It remains to be seen how easy it will be to translate into a vaccine, but [for blood stage vaccines] PfRh5 is now at the top of the list.
"Vaccine candidates will come. If I had to bet, I'd say you'd get some partial efficacy from it."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
US woman jailed for fatally shooting neighbour through door
14 mins -
Fidelity Bank’s Chief Risk Officer advocates for integrated risk management and innovation
33 mins -
Telecel Ghana’s Ashanti Month: A celebration of sports, culture and community
1 hour -
Air Quality and Pollution: A neglected crisis in Ghana’s 2024 manifestos
1 hour -
Macy’s employee hid more than $130m in delivery expenses
1 hour -
Trump vows day-one tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China
2 hours -
US universities warn foreign students on Trump immigration crackdown
2 hours -
Feed the Future Resilience in Northern Ghana announces $3m grant to support farmers
2 hours -
‘The election is not a done deal’ – Hackman Owusu-Agyeman warns NDC
3 hours -
‘Even if you bring Jesus as EC Chair, NDC will complain’ – Hackman Owusu-Agyeman
4 hours -
‘Difficulties are a fact, but NPP has a plan’ – Hackman Owusu-Agyeman on economy
5 hours -
KNUST health sciences graduates urged to uphold integrity in leadership
5 hours -
16 missing after Red Sea tourist boat sinks
5 hours -
Angela Merkel defends ties with Russia and blocking Ukraine from Nato
5 hours -
Right to Dream are filling ‘the big gap’ in Ghana – UG Director of Sports
6 hours