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UC Malaria Research and Control Group vows to defeat malaria

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Kathy Keatley Garvey

Publication Information

California Agriculture 61(2):56-58.

Published April 01, 2007

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Twenty-one scientists from five UC campuses are partnering with the Mosquito and Vector Control Association of California to defeat one of the world's oldest and deadliest diseases: malaria.

Malaria infects some 350 to 500 million people a year, killing between 1 million and 2.5 million, according to the World Health Organization. Ninety percent of the global incidence of malaria occurs in Africa, where a child dies from the disease every 30 seconds.

The UC Malaria Research and Control Group (MRCG) vows to change that. The group, formed in February 2006, is a branch of the UC Mosquito Research Program, a statewide program of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources.

“We're firmly committed to defeating the most formidable and challenging mosquito-borne disease,” says medical entomologist and MRCG director Gregory Lanzaro, who also directs the UC Mosquito Research Program and the UC Davis Center for Vectorborne Diseases.

“This is all about saving lives,” Lanzaro says. “It's the right thing to do. We are combining compassion, technology and science to defeat a killer.”

Malaria, first recognized 4,000 years ago and eradicated in the United States in the early 1950s, has been eliminated in many parts of Asia, Europe and the Americas, but is raging uncontrolled in many parts of Africa, Lanzaro says. “The spike can be attributed to more efficient mosquito vectors, increased pesticide and drug resistance, and socioeconomic factors, including struggling health systems.”

Malaria threatens more than 100 countries and territories, with more than 40% of the world's population at risk, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Children under age 5 and pregnant women are most susceptible.

Lanzaro, who researches Anopheles gambiae, the principal vector of malaria in Africa, says the most deadly parasite is lasmodium fal-ciparum. It can kill within hours of noticeable symptoms, which include high fever, severe headache, drowsiness, delirium and confusion. The malaria mosquitoes bite at night, usually between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m.

Focus on research and education

At its organizational meeting in May 2006, MRCG agreed to focus on academic research, education and public service. Its mission is threefold: facilitate collaborative activities, including organized research and training; mitigate the malaria burden in Africa; and provide technical advice to public health agencies on malaria control programs, based on mosquito abatement in Africa.

Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis medical entomologist, traveled to Mali in summer 2006 as part of the UC Mosquito Research and Control Group's efforts to wipe out malaria, a devastating mosquito-borne disease.

Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis medical entomologist, traveled to Mali in summer 2006 as part of the UC Mosquito Research and Control Group's efforts to wipe out malaria, a devastating mosquito-borne disease.

Individual members of MRCG are involved in eight African partnerships and two research-training grants.

Basic researchers study mosquito molecular genetics, population genomics and the ecology of malaria vectors, mosquito mating biology, and the genetics of immunology and biochemistry of A.gambiae/P. falciparum interactions.

Applied research involves the evaluation of existing insecticide-based control strategies, the development of novel mosquito attractants, new assays for the detection of metabolic insecticide resistance in mosquitoes, the role of agricultural insecticide use in the development of resistance in mosquitoes, the mass-rearing of A. gambiae, and models for malaria associated with rice agriculture.

Lanzaro and UC Davis medical entomologist Anthony Cornel of the UC Mosquito Research Laboratory, located at the Kearney Agricultural Center in Parlier, have conducted fieldwork in Africa for more than 15 years, zeroing in on insecticide and drug resistance and population genetics. Last summer, medical entomologist Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis School of Medicine faculty member, and entomology graduate students Tara Thiemann and Lisa Reimer joined them in Mali. Cornel, a native of South Africa, and Thiemann also worked in Cameroon last summer.

Funded by a National Institutes of Health grant, Lanzaro is researching the complex genetic structure of A. gambiae. “Using DNA markers we have been able to demonstrate that subpopulations of this mosquito exist in nature that do not interbreed and therefore do not exchange genes,” Lanzaro says. “These subpopulations often exist even within a single village. This has important consequences to understand patterns of resistance to insecticides that form the basis of malaria control campaigns.”

Anthony “Anton” Cornell, UC Davis medical entomologist, collects mosquitoes; one focus of his work is insecticide resistance in malaria vectors.

Anthony “Anton” Cornell, UC Davis medical entomologist, collects mosquitoes; one focus of his work is insecticide resistance in malaria vectors.

Cornel's work focuses on understanding environmental exposures to insecticides and the various mechanisms responsible for mosquito resistance to insecticides. This includes developing field assays to monitor resistance, an important factor in malaria control programs.

Luckhart's research is aimed at understanding the relationship between malaria parasites and their mosquito vectors. “Her work is improving our understanding of why some mosquitoes are capable of transmitting this deadly parasite, while others do not,” Lanzaro says.

Delegations to Tanzania, the White House

A four-member MRCG delegation, led by Lanzaro and Cornel, journeyed to Tanzania in mid-October to develop collaborations and build partnerships for malaria control and research. “Malaria is the leading cause of death in both children and adults in Tanzania,” Lanzaro says. “In 2003, the most recent year for which information is available, there were more than 10 million cases of malaria in Tanzania.”

The delegation included two representatives from the Mosquito Vector and Control Association of California: Major Dhillon, manager of the Northwest Mosquito and Vector Control District, Corona; and Steve Mulligan, who manages the Consolidated Mosquito Abatement District, Selma.

Lanzaro also represented MRCG at the Dec. 14, 2006, White House Summit on Malaria, which brought together international experts; corporations and foundations; African civic leaders; and voluntary, faith-based and nonprofit organizations. The goal is to raise awareness of malaria and to mobilize a grassroots effort to save millions of lives in Africa. President Bush declared April 25 as Malaria Day.

In response, Lanzaro has organized the first-ever Malaria Awareness Day symposium on the UC Davis campus for April 25, gathering members of the scientific community to discuss malaria and the UC Davis commitment to global health. Topics will range from the history of malaria in California to current novel malaria-control strategies in Africa.

Speaking on the history of malaria in California will be Robert K. Washino, professor and chair emeritus of the UC Davis entomology department, and co-author of Mosquitoes of California.

“Malaria,” Washino says, “will continue to be of concern to residents of California due to continued travel outside the United States by civilian and military personnel, immigration policies and most recently, the potential effect of global warming on mosquito-parasite interactions involved in malaria transmission.”

In Africa, the Anopheles gambiae mosquito transmits Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria.

In Africa, the Anopheles gambiae mosquito transmits Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria.

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UC Malaria Research and Control Group vows to defeat malaria

Kathy Keatley Garvey
Webmaster Email: sjosterman@ucanr.edu

UC Malaria Research and Control Group vows to defeat malaria

Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article
Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article

Authors

Kathy Keatley Garvey

Publication Information

California Agriculture 61(2):56-58.

Published April 01, 2007

PDF  |  Citation  |  Permissions

Full text

Twenty-one scientists from five UC campuses are partnering with the Mosquito and Vector Control Association of California to defeat one of the world's oldest and deadliest diseases: malaria.

Malaria infects some 350 to 500 million people a year, killing between 1 million and 2.5 million, according to the World Health Organization. Ninety percent of the global incidence of malaria occurs in Africa, where a child dies from the disease every 30 seconds.

The UC Malaria Research and Control Group (MRCG) vows to change that. The group, formed in February 2006, is a branch of the UC Mosquito Research Program, a statewide program of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources.

“We're firmly committed to defeating the most formidable and challenging mosquito-borne disease,” says medical entomologist and MRCG director Gregory Lanzaro, who also directs the UC Mosquito Research Program and the UC Davis Center for Vectorborne Diseases.

“This is all about saving lives,” Lanzaro says. “It's the right thing to do. We are combining compassion, technology and science to defeat a killer.”

Malaria, first recognized 4,000 years ago and eradicated in the United States in the early 1950s, has been eliminated in many parts of Asia, Europe and the Americas, but is raging uncontrolled in many parts of Africa, Lanzaro says. “The spike can be attributed to more efficient mosquito vectors, increased pesticide and drug resistance, and socioeconomic factors, including struggling health systems.”

Malaria threatens more than 100 countries and territories, with more than 40% of the world's population at risk, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Children under age 5 and pregnant women are most susceptible.

Lanzaro, who researches Anopheles gambiae, the principal vector of malaria in Africa, says the most deadly parasite is lasmodium fal-ciparum. It can kill within hours of noticeable symptoms, which include high fever, severe headache, drowsiness, delirium and confusion. The malaria mosquitoes bite at night, usually between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m.

Focus on research and education

At its organizational meeting in May 2006, MRCG agreed to focus on academic research, education and public service. Its mission is threefold: facilitate collaborative activities, including organized research and training; mitigate the malaria burden in Africa; and provide technical advice to public health agencies on malaria control programs, based on mosquito abatement in Africa.

Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis medical entomologist, traveled to Mali in summer 2006 as part of the UC Mosquito Research and Control Group's efforts to wipe out malaria, a devastating mosquito-borne disease.

Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis medical entomologist, traveled to Mali in summer 2006 as part of the UC Mosquito Research and Control Group's efforts to wipe out malaria, a devastating mosquito-borne disease.

Individual members of MRCG are involved in eight African partnerships and two research-training grants.

Basic researchers study mosquito molecular genetics, population genomics and the ecology of malaria vectors, mosquito mating biology, and the genetics of immunology and biochemistry of A.gambiae/P. falciparum interactions.

Applied research involves the evaluation of existing insecticide-based control strategies, the development of novel mosquito attractants, new assays for the detection of metabolic insecticide resistance in mosquitoes, the role of agricultural insecticide use in the development of resistance in mosquitoes, the mass-rearing of A. gambiae, and models for malaria associated with rice agriculture.

Lanzaro and UC Davis medical entomologist Anthony Cornel of the UC Mosquito Research Laboratory, located at the Kearney Agricultural Center in Parlier, have conducted fieldwork in Africa for more than 15 years, zeroing in on insecticide and drug resistance and population genetics. Last summer, medical entomologist Shirley Luckhart, a UC Davis School of Medicine faculty member, and entomology graduate students Tara Thiemann and Lisa Reimer joined them in Mali. Cornel, a native of South Africa, and Thiemann also worked in Cameroon last summer.

Funded by a National Institutes of Health grant, Lanzaro is researching the complex genetic structure of A. gambiae. “Using DNA markers we have been able to demonstrate that subpopulations of this mosquito exist in nature that do not interbreed and therefore do not exchange genes,” Lanzaro says. “These subpopulations often exist even within a single village. This has important consequences to understand patterns of resistance to insecticides that form the basis of malaria control campaigns.”

Anthony “Anton” Cornell, UC Davis medical entomologist, collects mosquitoes; one focus of his work is insecticide resistance in malaria vectors.

Anthony “Anton” Cornell, UC Davis medical entomologist, collects mosquitoes; one focus of his work is insecticide resistance in malaria vectors.

Cornel's work focuses on understanding environmental exposures to insecticides and the various mechanisms responsible for mosquito resistance to insecticides. This includes developing field assays to monitor resistance, an important factor in malaria control programs.

Luckhart's research is aimed at understanding the relationship between malaria parasites and their mosquito vectors. “Her work is improving our understanding of why some mosquitoes are capable of transmitting this deadly parasite, while others do not,” Lanzaro says.

Delegations to Tanzania, the White House

A four-member MRCG delegation, led by Lanzaro and Cornel, journeyed to Tanzania in mid-October to develop collaborations and build partnerships for malaria control and research. “Malaria is the leading cause of death in both children and adults in Tanzania,” Lanzaro says. “In 2003, the most recent year for which information is available, there were more than 10 million cases of malaria in Tanzania.”

The delegation included two representatives from the Mosquito Vector and Control Association of California: Major Dhillon, manager of the Northwest Mosquito and Vector Control District, Corona; and Steve Mulligan, who manages the Consolidated Mosquito Abatement District, Selma.

Lanzaro also represented MRCG at the Dec. 14, 2006, White House Summit on Malaria, which brought together international experts; corporations and foundations; African civic leaders; and voluntary, faith-based and nonprofit organizations. The goal is to raise awareness of malaria and to mobilize a grassroots effort to save millions of lives in Africa. President Bush declared April 25 as Malaria Day.

In response, Lanzaro has organized the first-ever Malaria Awareness Day symposium on the UC Davis campus for April 25, gathering members of the scientific community to discuss malaria and the UC Davis commitment to global health. Topics will range from the history of malaria in California to current novel malaria-control strategies in Africa.

Speaking on the history of malaria in California will be Robert K. Washino, professor and chair emeritus of the UC Davis entomology department, and co-author of Mosquitoes of California.

“Malaria,” Washino says, “will continue to be of concern to residents of California due to continued travel outside the United States by civilian and military personnel, immigration policies and most recently, the potential effect of global warming on mosquito-parasite interactions involved in malaria transmission.”

In Africa, the Anopheles gambiae mosquito transmits Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria.

In Africa, the Anopheles gambiae mosquito transmits Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria.

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