Skip to content
J Student Reporters

J Student Reporters

featured by The Korea Daily

Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
  • How To Join JSR
  • In Print
  • JSR FAQ
  • Contact Us
Menu

Progress Made Against Malaria

Posted on May 26, 2013September 9, 2013 by Jasper Lee
Created in the 1940s by the US Office for Emergency Management, this sign warns about the malaria menace (National Archives).

On May 10, researchers from Michigan State University reported some success in their attempts to use Wolbachia bacteria to combat malaria.

The researchers injected mosquitoes with Wolbachia and tested the effects of the bacteria on their offspring. After infection, scientists investigated the effects of the bacteria. The research, published in the May 10 edition of Science, said the mothers spread the bacteria to 34 generations of descendants. Those descendants carried less than one-third as many malaria parasites as the uninfected mosquitoes.

Though Wolbachia is promising, its impact is mitigated by several factors. The females infected by Wolbachia generally produce less offspring, and this decrease in reproductive potential would dampen efforts to eliminate Malaria. Also, because malaria affects various other species of the mosquito, scientists must create individual strains of Wolbachia to successfully infect these various species.

Wolbachia, however, has been successfully used to combat the spread of dengue fever. With some more work, it may prove pivotal in the fight against malaria, a widespread and historically prevalent killer.

Jasper Lee

Jasper Lee

Jasper Lee is a first-time Student Reporter and a Junior at Granada Hills Charter High School.

More Posts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

search articles

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

www.EduBridgePlus.com JSR 기사 보기

search articles

Categories

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

Apply 22nd JSR

©2025 J Student Reporters | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb
Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
  • How To Join JSR
  • In Print
  • JSR FAQ
  • Contact Us