Journal article
Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte invasion through glycophorin C and selection for Gerbich negativity in human populations
AG Maier, MT Duraisingh, JC Reeder, SS Patel, JW Kazura, PA Zimmerman, AF Cowman
Nature Medicine | NATURE AMERICA INC | Published : 2003
DOI: 10.1038/nm807
Abstract
Geographic overlap between malaria and the occurrence of mutant hemoglobin and erythrocyte surface proteins has indicated that polymorphisms in human genes have been selected by severe malaria. Deletion of exon 3 in the glycophorin C gene (called GYPCΔex3 here) has been found in Melanesians; this alteration changes the serologic phenotype of the Gerbich (Ge) blood group system, resulting in Ge negativity. The GYPCΔex3 allele reaches a high frequency (46.5%) in coastal areas of Papua New Guinea where malaria is hyperendemics. The Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte-binding antigen 140 (EBA140, also known as BAEBL) binds with high affinity to the surface of human erythrocytes. Here we show that ..
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Awarded by National Institutes of Health