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Quebec City researchers say microscopic organism from Nunavut could treat malaria

WATCH: Researchers in Quebec City are on the verge of an exciting breakthrough that could help treat a deadly tropical disease. A research team has recently discovered a microscopic fungus, which scientists say could help treat Malaria. Global's Raquel Fletcher has the details. – Aug 4, 2020

For Quebec City chemist Normand Voyer, the Canadian North isn’t just a beautiful landscape, it is full of potentially life-saving organisms just waiting to be studied at a molecular level.

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“All this molecular treasure is hiding in these plants and different organisms,” he said.

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In fact, less than three per cent of northern plants and animals have been studied. Discoveries are a challenge — that’s why Voyer, a Laval University chemistry professor, was surprised and excited when a team from the University of Prince Edward Island came across an organism native to Iqaluit.

It’s a microscopic fungus with natural chemical properties which “share similar feature in terms of structure to known substances that have anti-malarial activity,” Voyer explained.

Voyer’s group believes this northern fungus can help treat malaria — a tropical disease which infects more than 200 million people every year and is responsible for close to half a million deaths.

READ MORE: Malaria deaths still at ‘unacceptably high levels’ worldwide: WHO

“It’s like influenza times 5,000,” said Dave Richard, a malaria expert and a microbiologist at the Centre hospitalier de l’Université Laval (CHUL) in Quebec City, Richard’s hometown.

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“Tropical diseases, they’re obviously affecting people who have barely any money to feed themselves. So in order to have the infrastructure in order to perform that kind of high-level research, it has to be done in developed countries,” Richard explained.

“You have a tropical disease, you have a molecule from the Great White North, and you put them together, and you have something that works. That’s fantastic,” Richard said.

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Richard said this latest finding could prove to be a major breakthrough — and one that cannot come soon enough.

“What we see now is there is resistance through all available anti-malaria drugs so we definitely need to find new drugs,” he said.

It could still take years before a potential drug hits the market.

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