The system provides scientists with a better understanding of how malaria parasites mate and spread.
Creating moving digital holograms of malaria sperm has given researchers fresh insights into the behaviour of these tiny life forms.
Understanding how malaria parasites mate could pave the way for improved prevention and control of this deadly disease, which poses a threat to half of the world's population, researchers said.
Malaria parasites mate in the gut of mosquitoes, and people can catch the disease when they are bitten by these infected, blood-sucking insects.
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This motion is thought to help the sperm swim between red blood cells to find female mates.
Malaria sperm use microscopic structures, known as flagella, to swim. These structures are important because they are used by many parasites to invade parts of the body.
They also perform essential roles in embryonic development, reproduction, and nutrient uptake in all animals.
"Findings gained using our unique system provide us with a better understanding of how malaria parasites mate and spread this deadly disease, and have revealed that malaria sperm, and similar organisms, have greater freedom of movement than was previously thought," Dr Sarah Reece, Royal Society Fellow at the University of Edinburgh and one of the authors of the study, said.