Platelets kill up to 60% of malaria parasites: Study

IANS  |  Sydney 

Platelets -- found in the blood -- are the first line of defence in patients with malaria, killing up to 60 per cent of the parasites circulating in the bloodstream, finds a study.

The study found that platelets bind to and kill parasites in patients infected with each of the major parasite species which infect and kill humans -- falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae and P. knowlesi.

"These are important findings and are the first direct evidence of protection by platelets in any human infectious disease," said the lead author, doctoral student from the Menzies School of Health Research, an Australia-based non-profit organisation.

"We found that platelets may kill around 20 per cent of circulating parasites in clinical malaria, and in P. vivax this may be as high as 60 per cent," Kho added.

The study, published in the journal Blood, involved 376 people, with and without malaria, from Papua, and Sabah,

The process of killing the parasites is triggered by a toxic peptide called PF4.

The platelets bind to the human red cells, containing the parasites, and kill the parasites by releasing into the red cell PF4.

The findings suggest PF4-based peptides could be potential candidates for in the future, the researchers said.

"Given platelets show activity in the test-tube in killing many other microbes that infect humans, and low platelets are a risk for in other human diseases, we should consider platelets to be an important first-line defence in how humans protect themselves from microbes," said Brendan McMorran, at The

"Previous studies in laboratory mice infected with malaria parasites have shown conflicting results, but the findings in are now clear - platelets kill parasites," the researchers noted.

--IANS

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First Published: Thu, August 02 2018. 13:10 IST