Purdue researcher awarded $1.3 million for malaria drug trials in Southeast Asia and Africa

Philip Low looks to validate previous trial results and test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria drug therapy can be reduced

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 15, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Purdue researcher is taking a giant leap forward in the fight against drug-resistant strains of malaria in developing countries.

Open Philanthropy has awarded $1.38 million to Philip Low to further validate a drug therapy that he and his colleagues have previously shown to successfully treat the disease. Low (rhymes with “now”) is Purdue University’s Presidential Scholar for Drug Discovery and the Ralph C. Corley Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Science.

For years, experts have been concerned about the rise of drug-resistant malaria variants in Southeast Asia and the prospect that one or more of these strains might travel to Africa. A similar event occurred in the 1980s with the emergence of drug resistance to the then-standard treatment of chloroquine, which resulted in millions of deaths.

But Low is working to save lives on both continents by conducting clinical trials to validate previous results and to test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria treatment can be reduced.

While studying how malaria propagates in human blood, Low and his research team discovered that the cancer drug therapy imatinib is effective in the treatment of drug-resistant malaria. Trials in Southeast Asia showed that imatinib, when combined with the customary malaria therapy, clears all malaria parasites from 90% of patients within 48 hours and 100% of patients within three days. The patients receiving imatinib were also relieved of their fevers in less than half of the time experienced by similar patients treated with the standard therapy.

Open Philanthropy has awarded Low $600,000 for a larger clinical trial in Southeast Asia to validate his previous trials. The organization has also awarded Low $780,000 to determine whether the usual three-day therapy can be reduced to two days or even one. This work will be focused in the African countries of Kenya and Tanzania where malaria is prominent.

“We found that people in Africa must often walk many miles to obtain treatment for malaria. They will receive three pills, walk all the way home, take one or two pills, start to feel better, and then save the third pill for their next malaria infection,” Low said. “When they don’t finish the course of treatment, only the most drug-resistant strains of the parasite survive and spread. And that’s how people build up drug resistance. So we’d like to eventually be able to cure all patients with just one pill. It would prevent these drug-resistant strains from ever proliferating.”

Open Philanthropy is a grantmaking organization whose mission is to use its resources to help others as much as it can, according to the funder.

“This is yet another case of an organization recognizing Philip Low’s brilliance, scientific vision and mission to help people in all corners of the world,” said Brooke Beier, senior vice president of Purdue Innovates. “The Purdue Research Foundation has been a proud partner in supporting his work, protecting and promoting his intellectual property that is changing lives and making our world a better place to live.”

Since 1988, Low has been listed on more than 145 invention disclosures to the Purdue Innovates Office of Technology Commercialization. He has been listed on more than 600 patents in nearly two dozen countries around the world from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and international patent organizations. During his tenure at Purdue, Low has been awarded 213 research grants for more than $43.5 million. His work also receives support from the Purdue Institute for Cancer Research and the Purdue Institute for Drug Discovery.

Imatinib was originally produced by Novartis for the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia and other cancers. It works by blocking specific enzymes involved in the growth of cancers.

“When we discovered the ability of imatinib to block parasite propagation in human blood cultures in petri dishes, we initiated a human clinical trial where we combined imatinib with the standard treatment (piperaquine plus dihydroartemisinin) used to treat malaria in much of the world,” Low said.

Malaria infects human red blood cells, where it reproduces and eventually activates a red blood cell enzyme that in turn triggers rupture of the cell and release of a form of the parasite called a merozoite into the bloodstream. Low and his colleagues theorized that by blocking the critical red blood cell enzyme, they could stop the infection. The data from initial drug trials have confirmed that.

“Because we’re targeting an enzyme that belongs to the red blood cell, the parasite can’t mutate to develop resistance — it simply can’t mutate our proteins in our blood cells,” Low said. “This is a novel approach that will hopefully become a therapy that can’t be evaded by the parasite in the future. This would constitute an important contribution to human health.”

The goal, Low said, is to get this into developing countries to save lives. With this new round of funding, he says they’re now closer than they’ve ever been.

About Purdue University

Purdue University is a public research institution with excellence at scale. Ranked among top 10 public universities and with two colleges in the top 4 in the United States, Purdue discovers and disseminates knowledge with a quality and at a scale second to none. More than 105,000 students study at Purdue across modalities and locations, with 50,000 in person on the West Lafayette campus. Committed to affordability and accessibility, Purdue’s main campus has frozen tuition 12 years in a row. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next giant leap, including its first comprehensive urban campus in Indianapolis, the new Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr. School of Business, and Purdue Computes, at https://www.purdue.edu/president/strategic-initiatives.

About Purdue Innovates

Purdue Innovates is a unified network at Purdue Research Foundation to assist Purdue faculty, staff, students and alumni in either IP commercialization or startup creation. As a conduit to technology commercialization, intellectual property protection and licensing, startup creation and venture capital, Purdue Innovates serves as the front door to translate new ideas into world-changing impact.

For more information on licensing a Purdue innovation, contact the Office of Technology Commercialization at otcip@prf.org. For more information about involvement and investment opportunities in startups based on a Purdue innovation, contact Purdue Innovates at purdueinnovates@prf.org.

Media contact: Steve Martin, sgmartin@prf.org

Sources: Philip Low, plow@purdue.edu

Brooke Beier, blbeier@prf.org

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Steve Martin
Purdue Research Foundation
sgmartin@prf.org

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8923129

Torkham border opened for traffic and cargo vehicles after 9 days

KHYBER: Torkham border has been reopened after 9 days with Afghanistan assurance that its territory will not be used against Pakistan.

According to sources, 2 vehicles have entered to Pakistan from Afghanistan. Traffic has also started. The opening of gates on both sides of Torkham border has caused a wave of happiness among people.

It is pertinent to say that Afghan Foreign Minister Maulvi Amir Khan Muttaqi has requested to open the border by assuring that Afghan territory would not be used against Pakistan in a meeting with Pakistani authorities. In the backdrop of this assurance Pakistan considered reopening the border.

Trade activities were completely suspended due to closure of Torkham border for 9 days.

Earlier while expressing concern over misuse of Afghan Transit Trade Agreement, spokesperson of Foreign Office said that transit trade is only between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

India is not included in it. There has been no change in position regarding recognition of Afghan interim government. The territory of Afghanistan is being used against Pakistan.

Mumtaz Zahra Baloch further said that presence of terrorists among Afghan refugees is intolerable.

Pakistan has always helped landlocked Afghanistan. Transit Trade Agreement has been followed with good intension but there are serious concerns about misuse of agreement.

On serious reservations of Pakistan, foreign Minister of interim government of Afghanistan Amir Khan Muttaqi has assured Pakistani Charge d'affaires that Afghan Territory will not be used against Pakistan.

Torkham border opened for traffic and cargo vehicles after 9 days

KHYBER: Torkham border has been reopened after 9 days with Afghanistan assurance that its territory will not be used against Pakistan.

According to sources, 2 vehicles have entered to Pakistan from Afghanistan. Traffic has also started. The opening of gates on both sides of Torkham border has caused a wave of happiness among people.

It is pertinent to say that Afghan Foreign Minister Maulvi Amir Khan Muttaqi has requested to open the border by assuring that Afghan territory would not be used against Pakistan in a meeting with Pakistani authorities. In the backdrop of this assurance Pakistan considered reopening the border.

Trade activities were completely suspended due to closure of Torkham border for 9 days.

Earlier while expressing concern over misuse of Afghan Transit Trade Agreement, spokesperson of Foreign Office said that transit trade is only between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

India is not included in it. There has been no change in position regarding recognition of Afghan interim government. The territory of Afghanistan is being used against Pakistan.

Mumtaz Zahra Baloch further said that presence of terrorists among Afghan refugees is intolerable.

Pakistan has always helped landlocked Afghanistan. Transit Trade Agreement has been followed with good intension but there are serious concerns about misuse of agreement.

On serious reservations of Pakistan, foreign Minister of interim government of Afghanistan Amir Khan Muttaqi has assured Pakistani Charge d'affaires that Afghan Territory will not be used against Pakistan.

Rubina Jamil, becomes first PTI woman leader who gets bail in Jinnah House attack case

LAHORE: Bail of first PTI woman leader Rubina Jamil nominated in central FIR in Jinnah House attack case has been approved.

Anti Terrorism Court (ATC) has issued the written decision on approving bail after arrest plea of PTI former MNA Robina Jamil. She has become first PTI woman leader who has been granted bail after arrest in attack on Jinnah House case. .

It has been said in written order that bail of Robina Jamil is approved on medical grounds.

According to police record the accused was empty handed. She was only chanting political slogans.

The order said that bail plea of Robina Jamil is approved against surety bond in the sum of Rs 100000.

The release of Robina Jamil is not possible despite approval of her bail plea.

Sources said police have added more clauses in FIR. She will have to get bail against the newly added sections in the FIR separately. She will have to seek bail in the remaining two cases as well.

Rubina Jamil, becomes first PTI woman leader who gets bail in Jinnah House attack case

LAHORE: Bail of first PTI woman leader Rubina Jamil nominated in central FIR in Jinnah House attack case has been approved.

Anti Terrorism Court (ATC) has issued the written decision on approving bail after arrest plea of PTI former MNA Robina Jamil. She has become first PTI woman leader who has been granted bail after arrest in attack on Jinnah House case. .

It has been said in written order that bail of Robina Jamil is approved on medical grounds.

According to police record the accused was empty handed. She was only chanting political slogans.

The order said that bail plea of Robina Jamil is approved against surety bond in the sum of Rs 100000.

The release of Robina Jamil is not possible despite approval of her bail plea.

Sources said police have added more clauses in FIR. She will have to get bail against the newly added sections in the FIR separately. She will have to seek bail in the remaining two cases as well.

Former govt manipulated the NAB law to serve their personal interests: Sirajul Haq

FAISALABAD: Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan Emir Sirajul Haq has asserted that the former government manipulated the NAB law to serve their personal interests, highlighting the pressing need for comprehensive accountability.

Speaking at a public rally held on Friday, Sirajul Haq lamented that in Pakistan, the parliament often enacts laws to shield the powerful, and the courts make decisions based on individuals' social status. Sirajul Haq expressed hope that the incoming Chief Justice would ensure impartial justice, eliminating impact regarding the judges' political affiliations.

He asserted the importance of implementing a fair accountability process for those who waived of billions in loans, ultimately leading to the country's economic downfall. Citing data presented in the Senate, Sirajul Haq said that over 988 major companies and influential figures had their loans, totaling 4.8 trillion rupees, forgiven.

Sirajul Haq called for the government to eliminate the additional taxes included in electricity bills and scrutinize costly contracts with Independent Power Producers (IPPs).

The JI leader emphasized that the caretaker government's primary duty should be to ensure transparent elections and facilitate the peaceful transfer of power to elected representatives following clean and transparent elections. Regrettably, he observed that the caretakers appeared to be involved in every matter except elections, emphasizing that empowering the people to make decisions is the cornerstone of strengthening democracy.

He criticized the former governments of PPP and PML-N for holding a Council of Common Interests (CCI) meeting in the eleventh hour of their tenure, approving the census, which provided an excuse for the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to delay the elections. Contrary to this, Jamaat-e-Islami believes that elections should adhere to the constitutional timeframe of 90 days following the dissolution of assemblies, he said.

Sirajul Haq reiterated that the party is dedicated to the principles of democracy, constitutional governance, and the rule of law. He underlined that people in the country are grappling with inflation, unemployment, and poverty due to flawed policies adopted by previous governments of the PDM, PPP, and PTI. The caretakers, he said, gave continuation to the former policies instead of providing relief to the masses.

Sirajul Haq pledged to work towards freeing the country from its loans once Jamaat-e-Islami assumes power. Encouraging the electorate to place their trust in a fresh alternative, he urged them to consider Jamaat-e-Islami in the upcoming elections.

Prior to his speech, Sirajul Haq also met with leaders from the business community and expressed gratitude for their support during the September 2 shutter-down strike.