pubmed:abstractText |
Some of the available information on the genetics of Plasmodium is reviewed, and some of its peculiarities are emphasized. Genetic factors in the human host that may affect susceptibility to malaria are critically evaluated. Most of the studies thus far have been concerned with the genetics of host erythrocytes but there is recent evidence that genes affecting immune processes may also be involved. At least two genes affecting red cells confer relative resistance to P. falciparum: the autosomal gene for haemoglobin S (Hb S) and the sex-linked gene for the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) variant known as A(-). Whereas malaria selection can be regarded as established for these genes, it still remains a hypothesis for some other polymorphic traits of red cells. Differential susceptibility to P. falciparum of red cells with different genotypes has been tested by in vitro cultures, in which the invasion of new cells and intracellular development of the parasite can be followed by parasite counts and by (14)C-isoleucine uptake. A model that relates genetic factors in Plasmodium and in man and that may account for certain features of host-parasite interactions is presented.
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