Literature DB >> 33707498

Forager and farmer evolutionary adaptations to malaria evidenced by 7000 years of thalassemia in Southeast Asia.

Melandri Vlok1, Hallie R Buckley2, Justyna J Miszkiewicz3, Meg M Walker3, Kate Domett4, Anna Willis5, Hiep H Trinh6, Tran T Minh6, Mai Huong T Nguyen6, Lan Cuong Nguyen6, Hirofumi Matsumura7, Tianyi Wang8, Huu T Nghia6, Marc F Oxenham9.   

Abstract

Thalassemias are inherited blood disorders that are found in high prevalences in the Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. These diseases provide varying levels of resistance to malaria and are proposed to have emerged as an adaptive response to malaria in these regions. The transition to agriculture in the Holocene has been suggested to have influenced the selection for thalassemia in the Mediterranean as land clearance for farming encouraged interaction between Anopheles mosquitos, the vectors for malaria, and human groups. Here we document macroscopic and microscopic skeletal evidence for the presence of thalassemia in both hunter-gatherer (Con Co Ngua) and early agricultural (Man Bac) populations in northern Vietnam. Firstly, our findings demonstrate that thalassemia emerged prior to the transition to agriculture in Mainland Southeast Asia, from at least the early seventh millennium BP, contradicting a long-held assumption that agriculture was the main driver for an increase in malaria in Southeast Asia. Secondly, we describe evidence for significant malarial burden in the region during early agriculture. We argue that the introduction of farming into the region was not the initial driver of the selection for thalassemia, as it may have been in other regions of the world.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33707498      PMCID: PMC7952380          DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83978-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


  55 in total

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Authors:  Carlo Perisano; Emanuele Marzetti; Maria Silvia Spinelli; Cinzia Anna Maria Callà; Calogero Graci; Giulio Maccauro
Journal:  Anemia       Date:  2012-05-30

9.  Plasmodium cynomolgi as Cause of Malaria in Tourist to Southeast Asia, 2018.

Authors:  Gitte N Hartmeyer; Christen R Stensvold; Thilde Fabricius; Ea S Marmolin; Silje V Hoegh; Henrik V Nielsen; Michael Kemp; Lasse S Vestergaard
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 6.883

10.  Prevalence of human and non-human primate Plasmodium parasites in anopheline mosquitoes: a cross-sectional epidemiological study in Southern Vietnam.

Authors:  Vu Duc Chinh; Gaku Masuda; Vu Viet Hung; Hidekazu Takagi; Satoru Kawai; Takeshi Annoura; Yoshimasa Maeno
Journal:  Trop Med Health       Date:  2019-01-23
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