| Literature DB >> 17381244 |
Christian Timmann1, Jennifer A Evans, Inke R König, André Kleensang, Franz Rüschendorf, Julia Lenzen, Jürgen Sievertsen, Christian Becker, Yeetey Enuameh, Kingsley Osei Kwakye, Ernest Opoku, Edmund N L Browne, Andreas Ziegler, Peter Nürnberg, Rolf D Horstmann.
Abstract
Although balancing selection with the sickle-cell trait and other red blood cell disorders has emphasized the interaction between malaria and human genetics, no systematic approach has so far been undertaken towards a comprehensive search for human genome variants influencing malaria. By screening 2,551 families in rural Ghana, West Africa, 108 nuclear families were identified who were exposed to hyperendemic malaria transmission and were homozygous wild-type for the established malaria resistance factors of hemoglobin (Hb)S, HbC, alpha(+) thalassemia, and glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase deficiency. Of these families, 392 siblings aged 0.5-11 y were characterized for malaria susceptibility by closely monitoring parasite counts, malaria fever episodes, and anemia over 8 mo. An autosome-wide linkage analysis based on 10,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms was conducted in 68 selected families including 241 siblings forming 330 sib pairs. Several regions were identified which showed evidence for linkage to the parasitological and clinical phenotypes studied, among them a prominent signal on Chromosome 10p15 obtained with malaria fever episodes (asymptotic z score = 4.37, empirical p-value = 4.0 x 10(-5), locus-specific heritability of 37.7%; 95% confidence interval, 15.7%-59.7%). The identification of genetic variants underlying the linkage signals may reveal as yet unrecognized pathways influencing human resistance to malaria.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17381244 PMCID: PMC1829404 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Phenotype Adjustments of the Study Group (392 Siblings)
(A) Presence of asexual blood forms of P. falciparum in 31 weekly blood smears.
(B) Log of the 75th percentile of 31 parasite density values per individual.
(C) Median of 16 PCV assessments per individual.
(D) Malaria fever episodes were defined following WHO recommendations whereby multiple malaria attacks within 3 wk were considered recrudescences and counted as one episode (see Materials and Methods).
#Gender did not significantly influence any of the phenotypes. For the phenotype of parasite density, the effects of antimalarial treatments were addressed by exclusion of density values following 3 wk after treatment (see Materials and Methods). The phenotype of fever episodes was not corrected for the number of antimalarial treatments because of the direct causal relationship between disease episodes and treatments.
§31 weekly regression models.
*Anemia (PCV) was normally distributed, Shapiro-Wilk W test, p > 0.2.
Figure 2Quantitative-Trait, Multipoint Linkage Analysis of the Key Phenotypes of Uncomplicated Human Malaria
(A and B) Parasitological phenotypes. (C and D) Clinical phenotypes. A 10k-Affymetrix SNP array was used for genotyping 377 individuals comprising 241 siblings of 68 families. Results obtained by NPL are presented in the upper panels (z scores [Z] on the left axis) and those of HE are presented in the lower panels (LOD scores [LOD] on the left axis). Empirical significance levels (p-values indicated by dotted lines) were estimated by 100,000-fold Monte-Carlo permutations.