疟疾
CD36
突变
免疫系统
病毒学
恶性疟原虫
生物
遗传学
免疫学
受体
基因
作者
Timothy J. Aitman,Lisa D. Cooper,Penny J. Norsworthy,Faisal Wahid,Jennefer K. Gray,Brian R. Curtis,Paul McKeigue,Dominic Kwiatkowski,Brian Greenwood,Robert W. Snow,Adrian V. S. Hill,Berthold Lausen
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2000-06-01
卷期号:405 (6790): 1015-1016
被引量:256
摘要
A critical step in infection by Plasmodium falciparum, the microorganism that causes the most severe form of malaria, is the adhesion of parasitized red blood cells to capillary endothelium. The human protein CD36 is a major receptor for P. falciparum-infected red blood cells1,2 and may contribute to the disease by sequestering infected red blood cells1,2 and inhibiting the immune response to the parasite3. We have found that African populations contain an exceptionally high frequency of mutations in CD36. Unexpectedly, these mutations that cause CD36 deficiency are associated with susceptibility to severe malaria, suggesting that the presence of distinct CD36 mutations in Africans and Asians4,5,6 is due to some selection pressure other than malaria.
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