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Elsevier, Current Opinion in Immunology, (30), p. 39-47, 2014

DOI: 10.1016/j.coi.2014.06.004

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An evolutionary perspective of how infection drives human genome diversity: the case of malaria

Journal article published in 2014 by Valentina D. Mangano ORCID, David Modiano
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Infection with malaria parasites has imposed a strong selective pressure on the human genome, promoting the convergent evolution of a diverse range of genetic adaptations, many of which are harboured by the red blood cell, which hosts the pathogenic stage of the Plasmodium life cycle. Recent genome-wide and multi-centre association studies of severe malaria have consistently identified ATP2B4, encoding the major Ca2+ pump of erythrocytes, as a novel resistance locus. Evidence is also accumulating that interaction occurs among resistance loci, the most recent example being negative epistasis among alpha-thalassemia and haptoglobin type 2. Finally, studies on the effect of haemoglobin S and C on parasite transmission to mosquitoes have suggested that protective variants could increase in frequency enhancing parasite fitness. © 2014 .