Africa – Muslim Science https://muslim-science.com Bridging the gap between Science and Islam Wed, 21 Aug 2024 19:55:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.26 Mali trees can kill the Malaria carrying mosquito and its parasite https://muslim-science.com/mali-trees-can-kill-the-malaria-carrying-mosquito-and-its-parasite/ Mon, 24 Apr 2017 19:41:35 +0000 http://muslim-science.com/?p=3804  Scientists from the University of Oslo have found two novel compounds from African trees to treat Malaria – the most lethal disease effecting poor nations worldwide.

The chemicals from the trees can kill both Malaria carrying mosquito and the plasmodium is a major breakthrough. The compounds can destroy the vector of the disease and its parasite.

Mosquitoes carry Plasmodium falciparum – the most lethal form of malaria parasite and transmit it to the humans and other mammals.

Now scholars from the University of Oslo extracted important compounds from the bark of the Olon (Zanthoxylum heitzii) tree commonly found from Congo to Cameroon. But they also discovered another important chemical from a related tree in Mali.

“We produced extracts from the bark of the Olon tree and found that it contains at least one compound that kills the mosquitoes which transmit the malarial parasite. But the bark also contains another substance that kills the parasite itself”, says Associate Professor Helle Wangensteen from Pharmaceutical Chemistry department who led the study.

From traditional healing to bio-labs

The Olon is being used in folklore medicines across Africa from a long time where local traditional healers use it to kill mosquitoes and other insects. Professor emeritus Karl Egil Malterud at the University of Oslo launched the project in 2012 with other scholars to further investigate the trees bark in Malaria eradication.

After years of research, they discovered two important and already known compounds from the bark of the tree. The Pellitorine destroys mosquitoes and dihydronitidin kills the parasite.

Though the compounds are not new to science but there powerful effects against the mosquitoes and parasites were little known before the Norwegian scientist’s work.

The pellitorine was isolated by a student, Nastaran Moussavi from the bark of Olon tree from Mali. Later she examined the chemical at a French institute to see its effects on mosquitos. When she exposed the mosquitoes to the compound, they died quickly.

“This caused the mosquitos to die, literally as flies! The experiments showed that pellitorine is toxic to mosquitoes”, Malterud said in a press release of the university.

According to Wangesteen, the dihydronitidine compound proved lethal for the parasite. The postdoc scholar, Ingvild Austarheim tested the compound at the School of Biosciences lab at the University of Melbourne. The chemical was so effective against the parasite, tested at the best facilities of Malaria parasite research in Melbourne.

” We have strong research collaboration with African scientists and institutes towards this research,” said  Wangensteen talking on telephone with Muslim Science.

Now, the Melbourne team is interested to further investigate the chemical for any potential drug.

No priority for Malaria

Often dubbed as disease of the poor, Malaria effects some 200 million people annually but neglected by research and pharmaceutical companies. The Sub-Sahara Africa has the highest share of global Malaria burden which is 90 per cent. According to WHO, it killed 429 000 people in 2015 and majority of them were children and pregnant women from African states.

Professor Malterud stress to spray the locally produced pellitorine solution in mosquito infested areas.

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African moon mission seeks cash for first phase https://muslim-science.com/african-moon-mission-seeking-cash/ https://muslim-science.com/african-moon-mission-seeking-cash/#respond Mon, 12 Jan 2015 10:34:26 +0000 http://muslim-science.com/?p=2990

African moon mission seeks cash for first phase

By Paula Park

A group of African space enthusiasts have taken to the internet to raise money for what they say will be the continent’s first moon mission.

Africa2Moon’s main goal is to send a probe to orbit or land on the moon and beam back video images that will be passed on to African classrooms using the internet. The project aims to use space exploration to encourage young Africans to embrace science careers.

The project, conceived by the South African non-profit Foundation for Space Development, has turned to the crowdfunding website CauseVox to help finance the mission’s first phase up to November next year.

During this initial phase, the Foundation says work will be done to develop the final mission concept, carry out an associated feasibility study and hold outreach events.

Since fundraising began on 25 November, the project has brought in more than US$12,700  of the US$150,000 the Foundation hopes to raise by the end of January.

“Advancing an ambitious space project can contribute to getting more people that can join our industry.”

Sias Mostert, Space Advisory Company

“The main driver behind this mission is inspiring the youth of Africa to believe that space exploration … is not something that is the exclusive preserve of the most advanced countries,” Peter Martinez, the Foundation’s founding director tells SciDev.Net.

One in every nine African science graduates leaves the continent for jobs overseas, and most space science projects take place outside Africa, says Jonathan Weltman, the Foundation’s chief executive.

An African-sponsored space mission might be an incentive for scientists to stay on the continent and contribute to scientific expertise and infrastructure, Weltman tells SciDev.Net.

“The aspiration of any engineer or scientist is to try and reach the pinnacle of their field by working on the most important projects with the most recognised colleagues,” he says.

Sias Mostert is an executive at South African satellite program and systems engineering firm the Space Advisory Company. He donated US$1,000 to the Africa2Moon project, and sees the mission as a way to provoke interest in space and ensure that Africa can build the satellites and other infrastructure needed to boost development of information and communications technologies (ICTs).

“To roll out ICT infrastructure in Africa, space is the only quick solution,” Mostert tells SciDev.Net. “We also need great employees that are inspired, motivated and highly educated. Advancing an ambitious space project can contribute to getting more people that can join our industry.”

Peter M. B. Waswa, a Kenyan space engineer whose blog, spacekenya.org, advocates government-sponsored space exploration, says that crowdfunding is best for projects that the public can easily understand and get excited about. But it may be less suited to funding research projects or for building a significant space programme, he adds.

“Crowdfunding is not a viable option if you are interested in adopting space technology for sustainable national development aimed at improving the lives of ordinary citizens,” Waswa says.

> Link to Africa2Moon project

 

This article was originally published on SciDev.Net. Read the original article.

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