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 sugges...
The sickle cell trait has been widely considered a classic example of human evolution in action beca...
The frequencies of low-activity alleles of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in humans are highly co...
The human genetic factors that affect resistance to infectious disease are poorly understood. Here w...
Infection with malaria parasites has imposed a strong selective pressure on the human genome, promot...
Malaria is a major killer of children worldwide and the strongest known force for evolutionary selec...
Malaria is a major killer of children worldwide and the strongest known force for evolutionary selec...
SYNOPSIS. Malaria has been invoked, perhaps more than any other infectious disease, as a force for t...
Malaria Genomic Epidemiology Network The high prevalence of sickle haemoglobin in Africa shows that ...
Despite major attempts over the last century to control malaria, this disease still claims the lives...
Sickle cell haemoglobin (HbS) confers protection, albeit incomplete, from severe malaria. A recent s...
Infectious disease has long been recognised as a potent selective force. Malaria provides us with ou...
Malaria, which is a major infectious disease worldwide, is caused by the Plasmodium parasite, one of...
Malaria has been the pre-eminent cause of early mortality in many parts of the world throughout much...
Abstract. Malaria has been the greatest scourge of humankind for many millennia, and as a consequenc...
Malaria, which is a major infectious disease worldwide, is caused by the Plasmodium parasite, one of...
The sickle cell trait has been widely considered a classic example of human evolution in action beca...
The frequencies of low-activity alleles of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in humans are highly co...
The human genetic factors that affect resistance to infectious disease are poorly understood. Here w...
Infection with malaria parasites has imposed a strong selective pressure on the human genome, promot...
Malaria is a major killer of children worldwide and the strongest known force for evolutionary selec...
Malaria is a major killer of children worldwide and the strongest known force for evolutionary selec...
SYNOPSIS. Malaria has been invoked, perhaps more than any other infectious disease, as a force for t...
Malaria Genomic Epidemiology Network The high prevalence of sickle haemoglobin in Africa shows that ...
Despite major attempts over the last century to control malaria, this disease still claims the lives...
Sickle cell haemoglobin (HbS) confers protection, albeit incomplete, from severe malaria. A recent s...
Infectious disease has long been recognised as a potent selective force. Malaria provides us with ou...
Malaria, which is a major infectious disease worldwide, is caused by the Plasmodium parasite, one of...
Malaria has been the pre-eminent cause of early mortality in many parts of the world throughout much...
Abstract. Malaria has been the greatest scourge of humankind for many millennia, and as a consequenc...
Malaria, which is a major infectious disease worldwide, is caused by the Plasmodium parasite, one of...
The sickle cell trait has been widely considered a classic example of human evolution in action beca...
The frequencies of low-activity alleles of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in humans are highly co...
The human genetic factors that affect resistance to infectious disease are poorly understood. Here w...