Australian researchers say they are closing in on a potential vaccine against malaria, with a study showing their treatment had protected mice against several strains of the disease.
Michael Good, from Queensland's Griffith University, said the vaccine led to naturally existing white blood cells, or T-cells, attacking the potentially deadly malaria parasite which lives in red blood cells.
"A single vaccination induced profound immunity to different malaria parasite species," the study, published Tuesday in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, states.
Good said the team's research was focused on inducing the white blood cells to attack the parasite, whatever the malaria strain.
"The T-cells (white blood cells), when they're induced to kill malaria, can recognise proteins throughout the parasite, even internal proteins in the parasite," he told the ABC.