The Feasibility of Gamma Irradiation for Developing Malaria Vaccine

Mukh, Syaifudin and Devita, Tetriana and Darlina, Darlina and Siti, Nurhayati (2011) The Feasibility of Gamma Irradiation for Developing Malaria Vaccine. Atom Indonesia, 37 (3). pp. 91-101. ISSN 0126-1568

[thumbnail of The feasibility Atom Indonesia.pdf]
Preview
Text
The feasibility Atom Indonesia.pdf

Download (142kB) | Preview

Abstract

Malaria, a plasmodial disease, causes more than one million deaths per year and has a significant public health impact. Improved access to prompt treatment with effective antimalarial drugs need to be conducted for prevention of infection in high risk groups. However, the parasite as causal agent has exhibited a potential danger of wide-spread resistances. This warning has directed attention to the study of alternative methods of protection against the disease, among them is to do the immunization. A deeper understanding of the nature and regulation of protective
immune mechanisms against this parasite will facilitate the development of much needed vaccines. Developing a malaria vaccine remains an enormous scientific, technical, and financial challenge. Currently a vaccine is not fully available. Among the practical applications of radiobiological techniques that may be of considerable
interest for public health is the use of ionizing radiation in the preparation of vaccines. Convincing data were reported that sporozoites of Plasmodium berghei
irradiated with X- or gamma-rays, provide an antigenic stimulus effective to induce a protective immune response in mice and rats against subsequent sporozoite
infection. Irradiated parasites are better immunogens than killed ones and although non-infective they are still metabolically active, as shown by continued protein and
nucleic acid synthesis. There is a substantial number of data from human studies demonstrating that sporozoites attenuated by radiation are potent inducers of protective immunity and that they are safe and do not give rise to the asexual erythrocytic infections that cause malaria. This vaccine is relatively inexpensive to produce, easy to store, and transportable without refrigeration. A long-term effort and commitment to providing resources must be maintained and increased to achieve the goal of a malaria vaccine candidate where ionizing radiation as a tool to
prepare is seemingly feasible.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Taksonomi BATAN > Isotop dan Radiasi
Taksonomi BATAN > Isotop dan Radiasi > Pemanfaatan Isotop dan Radiasi > Bidang Kesehatan
Taksonomi BATAN > Isotop dan Radiasi > Pemanfaatan Isotop dan Radiasi
Divisions: BATAN > Pusat Teknologi Keselamatan dan Metrologi Radiasi
IPTEK > BATAN > Pusat Teknologi Keselamatan dan Metrologi Radiasi
Depositing User: Administrator Repository
Date Deposited: 26 May 2018 06:02
Last Modified: 02 Jun 2022 02:23
URI: https://karya.brin.go.id/id/eprint/2387

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item