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Official Opening of Learning Zone

  • Jan 2010: Sir Alan Langlands officially opens the Learning Zone The £2.5m Learning Zone has been officially opened by Sir Alan Langlands FRSE, Chief Executive of HEFCE, who said he was pleased to c ... see this storymore

Could you trade a paperclip for a house?

  • Jan 2010: LUYES president Lauren Dalton-Jarvis trades her paperclip with Louise Briggs from LUMS Lancaster University Young Entrepreneurs’ Society is to distribute a thousand paperclips across camp ... see this storymore

Could Satnavs Cause Carcrashes ?

  • Jan 2010: Could satnavs be as dangerous as mobile phones if used while driving? That’s the question being posed by researchers from Lancaster University and Royal Holloway, University of London, who are inves ... see this storymore

Lancaster leads £3.24 million creativity project

  • Feb 2010: Dr Corina SasComputer Scientists at Lancaster University are leading a £3.24 million project investigating the role of creativity in science and technology. Computer scientists, psychologist ... see this storymore

Postgraduate Statistics Centre: Putting Knowledge to Work: A New Approach. Karen Evans

  • February 2010: Postgraduate Statistics Centre – Teaching and Learning Seminar Programme Putting Knowledge to Work: A New Approach Speaker: Prof. Karen Evans, Institute of Education, University of London. Ap ... see this storymore

Law School Guest Speaker: Recent Developments in the Russian Legal System. Gennady Esakov

  • February 2010: Law School Guest Speaker Seminar Recent Developments in the Russian Legal System Professor Gennady Esakov, (Professor of Criminal Law), Moscow State Law Academy Professor Gennady wil ... see this storymore

CETL Master Class: Multivariate Data Analysis for Environmental Biologists

  • February 2010: The Postgraduate Statistics Centre (CETL), Department of Mathematics and Statistics are hosting a Master Class on Multivariate Data Analysis for Environmental Biologists, to be held on 23rd-25th Mar ... see this storymore

Accounting Seminar: Divident Smoothing and Predictability. Richard Priestley

  • February 2010: Accounting Seminar Divident Smoothing and Predictability Richard Priestley (Norwegian School of Management) Visit http://www.lums.lancs.ac.uk/departments/Accountin ... see this storymore

Functional Literacy – New Idea or Déjà Vu? Reflections on Adult Literacy Policy in England

  • February 2010: Department of Educational Research Seminar Series Functional Literacy – New Idea or Déjà Vu?: Reflections on Adult Literacy Policy in England Presented by Professor Mary Ha ... see this storymore

LRC Seminar: Farmers Facing Traceability: A case-study approach from Burgundy, France

  • February 2010: Literacy Research Centre Seminar Series Farmers Facing Traceability: A case-study approach from Burgundy, France Nathalie Joly and Laura Sayre, Institut National de la Recherche Agronom ... see this storymore

African Sleeping Sickness BreakthroughPrinter: link to friendly page

Ablation of flagellar proteins in African sleeping sickness parasite; monstrous cells arise (main pic) & rapidly die as parasites fail to divide - Inset: normal trypanosome for comparison not to scale
Ablation of flagellar proteins in African sleeping sickness parasite; monstrous cells arise (main pic) & rapidly die as parasites fail to divide - Inset: normal trypanosome for comparison not to scale

Researchers have made a crucial breakthrough in the journey towards finding a treatment for African Sleeping Sickness.

The team of researchers from Lancaster, Oxford and Manchester Universities have discovered a weakness in the parasite that causes the disease - it cannot survive in the human bloodstream without the use of its flagellum, a protein 'tail' that allows it to swim.

This unexpected discovery offers up a valuable lead in the search for new drugs to control the killer disease.

The study is published this week (March 9) in the leading scientific journal Nature.

The sleeping sickness parasite, Trypanosoma brucei, is a single-celled organism equipped with a whip-like tail or flagellum.  The parasite initially lives in the bloodstream of the human host causing fever and headaches, but eventually crosses into the brain where it causes irreversible neurological damage.  Without treatment, the disease is fatal.

According to the latest figures from the World Health Organisation (WHO), African Sleeping sickness threatens over 60 million people in 36 countries of sub-Saharan Africa. The number of new cases per year is estimated to be between 300,000 to 500,000 with at least 60,000 people dying annually from the disease.

Until now doctors have struggled to treat the disease as most of the drugs currently used to combat this disease have undesirable side-effects and parasites are beginning to show evidence of increasing drug resistance. Furthermore there is little hope of a vaccine.

 

 

Dr Richard Broadhead and Dr Paul McKean
Dr Richard Broadhead and Dr Paul McKean
Lancaster University Biologist Dr Paul McKean said: “In this study we describe, for the first time, a full catalogue of the proteins required to build the trypanosome flagellum (the sleeping sickness parasite’s tail).

 “We also show that many of these proteins are specific to the trypanosome flagellum. This latter finding is of critical importance since we also show that flagellum function is essential to the survival of bloodstream trypanosomes. These two observations raise the possibility that the flagellum may represent a novel target for the development of new drugs against this important medical pathogen.”

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