旺旺首页 > 英语 > VOA美国之音 > 特别英语慢速英语 > HEALTH REPORT > Increasing Supplies of Malaria Drug Through Genetic Engineering
更新时间:2006/4/19
 » Download Audio

Written by Cynthia Kirk

I’m Shep O'Neal with the VOA Special English Health Report.

Malaria infects as many as five hundred million people every year.  And more than one million people die from the disease each year.  Those who do not die become seriously ill. 

Southern African countries have the largest number of malaria deaths, mostly among young children.  The disease is also common in Asia.

Malaria is caused by a parasite. Mosquitoes carry the infection from person to person.  Researchers say the parasite is becoming increasingly resistant to older drugs used to treat the disease.

Artemisinin (ar-te-MIS-in-in) is the most effective treatment for malaria and the best drug for treating resistant forms. The World Health Organization says artemisinin should always be used in combination with other drugs to prevent drug resistance. 

Artemisinin is made from the sweet wormwood plant found in China and Vietnam.  But supplies of the plant are limited. And it takes a lot of plant material to get enough of the drug to treat one patient.  Many suppliers are unable to meet the strong demand.  The drug is costly to produce.  Each treatment costs more than two dollars.  So many people with malaria in developing countries are unable to get the drug.  Jay Keasling is a chemical and biological engineer at the University of California at Berkeley.  His research team has found a possible solution to the problem.  They reported their research in the publication Nature. They placed genes from the wormwood plant into a yeast organism and got it to produce large amounts of artemisinic acid.  This acid can be made into the drug artemisinin in just a few chemical steps. The researchers say this would end the need for a lot of plants.   

Mister Keasling says chemical tests show that the genetically engineered artemisinin is structurally the same as the natural form. The new drug must be tested in animals and people to make sure it is safe and effective against malaria.

So the researchers say the drug is still about five to ten years away from final development.  They say their findings could reduce the cost of the active substance in artemisinin by ninety percent. This could help save many lives. 

This VOA Special English Health Report was written by Cynthia Kirk. Our reports are online at voaspecialenglish.com.  I’m Shep O'Neal.

相关主题链接:
New Cervical Cancer Test for Developing Countries 发展中国家新的子宫颈癌检查
Plate Tectonics: Nature's Way of Stretching
How Farm Pay Compares to Industrial Pay in America
Itzhak Perlman: A Citizen of the World, With His Violin as a Passport
Fifty-seven nations face serious shortages of health care workers
Andy Warhol: The Father of Pop Art
Iran Rejects Appeal to Stop Enriching Uranium
Population Growth of the United States Leads Industrial Nations
Tax Time in America
President Wilson Begins Negotiations for a World War One Peace Treaty
School Districts Approve Plans to Link Teacher Pay with Student Performance
George Catlin Painted Native American Tribes and Their Cultures During the 1830s