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Malaria and the red cell
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Malaria and the Red Cell
David J. Weatherall, Louis H. Miller, Dror I. Baruch, Kevin Marsh, Ogobara K. Doumbo,
Climent Casals-Pascual, and David J. Roberts
Because of the breakdown of malaria control
programs, the constant emergence of drug resistant parasites, and, possibly, climatic changes
malaria poses a major problem for the developing
countries. In addition, because of the speed of
international travel it is being seen with increasing
frequency as an imported disease in non-tropical
countries. This update explores recent information
about the pathophysiology of the disease, its
protean hematological manifestations, and how
carrier frequencies for the common hemoglobin
disorders have been maintained by relative resistance to the malarial parasite.
In Section I, Dr. Louis Miller and colleagues
consider recent information about the pathophysi-
I. THE PATHOGENIC BASIS OF MALARIA*
Louis H. Miller, MD,** Dror I. Baruch, PhD,**
Kevin Marsh, FRCP, MBBS,†
and Ogobara K. Doumbo, MD, PhD‡
Malaria is today a disease of poverty and underdeveloped countries. In Africa, mortality remains high because there is limited access to treatment in the villages.
We should follow in Pasteur’s footsteps by using basic
research to develop better tools for the control and cure
of malaria. Insight into the complexity of malaria pathogenesis is vital for understanding the disease and will
provide a major step towards controlling malaria. Those
of us who work on pathogenesis must widen our approach and think in terms of new tools such as vaccines
to reduce disease. The inability of many countries to fund
expensive campaigns and anti-malarial treatment requires
that our new tools be highly effective and affordable.
Millions of children die from malaria in Africa every year.1 But the clinical outcome of an infection in a
child depends on many factors (Figure 1). These factors, often ill-defined, determine the outcome in each child.
The top priority must be disease prevention because of
the inability of the mothers to access or afford optimal
Hematology 2002
ology of malarial infection, including new information about interactions between the malarial
parasite and vascular endothelium.
In Section II, Dr. David Roberts discusses what
is known about the complex interactions between
red cell production and destruction that characterize the anemia of malaria, one of the commonest
causes of anemia in tropical countries.
In Section III, Dr. David Weatherall reviews
recent studies on how the high gene frequencies of
the thalassemias and hemoglobin variants have
been maintained by heterozygote advantage
against malaria and how malaria has shaped the
genetic structure of human populations.
treatment, and the ever-evolving drug resistance. Prevention may be effected through vector control such as
insecticide-treated bednets or through the development
of antimalarial vaccines.
Malaria: The Disease
Over the last 10 years, there have been several key shifts
in our understanding of what constitutes severe malaria,
* This section originally appeared in Nature [2002;Feb
7;415(6872):673-9] and has been reprinted with permission of
the publisher.
** Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, MD 20892
†
KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Collaboration Programme, Center
for Geographic Medicine Research Coast, Post Office
Box 230, Kilifi, Kenya kmarsh@kilifi.mimcom.net
‡
Malaria Research and Training Center, Bamako, Mali
okd@mrtcbko.malinet.ml
Acknowledgements: We thank John Barnwell (CDC,
Atlanta, GA) for sharing data before publication.
35
with acidosis suggests that it may play
a major role in compromising tissue
blood flow. Patients with malaria are
often dehydrated and relatively hypovolemic,8 potentially exacerbating microvascular obstruction by reducing
perfusion pressure. RBC destruction
is also an inevitable part of malaria,
and anemia further compromises oxygen delivery.
The second and related shift in
thinking about severe disease is the
realization that there is no simple
one-to-one correlation between clinical syndromes of severe disease and
pathogenic processes. Thus, severe
anemia may arise from multiple
poorly understood processes including acute hemolysis of uninfected
RBC and dyserythropoiesis, as well as
through the interaction of malaria infection with other parasite infections
Figure 1. The clinical outcome of a malarial infection in an Africa child depends on
many parasite, host, geographic and social factors. These converge in the child to
and with nutritional deficiencies.9 It
result in a range of outcomes, from an asymptomatic infection to severe disease and
is increasingly evident that for many
death.
desperately sick children, a simple one
pathogen–one disease model is not adequate, as bacteremia due to common pathogens may
and these shifts define the issues in pathogenesis that
be present with acute malaria and may be a factor in
need to be explored to better treat sick children. First
mortality.10,11 Even the rigorously defined syndrome of
has been the increasing recognition that severe malaria
cerebral malaria actually comprises children who have
is a multisystem disorder, even when the most dramatic
arrived at the point of coma through a variety of routes.
manifestations may appear to involve a single organ such
In many of these children, coma seems to be a response
as the brain. In particular, metabolic acidosis, often proto overwhelming metabolic stress rather than a primary
found, has been recognized as a major pathophysiologic
problem in the brain. Such children are often profoundly
feature that cuts across the classical clinical syndromes
acidotic and may regain consciousness remarkably
of cerebral malaria and severe malarial anemia.2 It is the
quickly following appropriate resuscitation,12 suggestsingle most important determinant of survival and diing that cerebral malaria in this instance cannot be a conrectly leads to a common, but previously poorly recog3
sequence of the classical histologic picture.
nized, syndrome of respiratory distress. In most cases,
Similarly, it has recently been recognized that a sigthis is predominantly (but not exclusively) a lactic acinificant proportion of children in coma are, in fact, exdosis.4 Children with severe malaria have multiple causes
periencing covert status epilepticus,13 which responds
of lactic acidosis, from increased production by pararapidly to appropriate anticonvulsant therapy. The pathosites, through direct stimulation by cytokines, to degenesis of this condition is unknown, but again the speed
creased clearance by the liver; however, most important
of resolution argues against classical views of pathogenby far is likely to be the combined effects of several facesis. The picture that emerges is of multiple processes
tors in reducing oxygen delivery to tissues.5 A key fealeading to a common picture. These distinctions are of
ture of the biology of Plasmodium falciparum is the abilmuch more than academic value: they have direct impliity of infected red blood cells (RBC) to adhere to the
cations for therapy, but they also identify the research
linings of small blood vessels. Such sequestered paraquestions for improving therapy of sick children.
sites provide considerable obstruction to tissue perfuSevere malaria is complex and probably cannot be
sion. In addition, it is becoming clear that in severe maaccurately represented by any single schema; however,
laria there may be marked reductions in the deformability
our current understanding of the way several key pathoof uninfected RBC.6,7 The pathogenesis of this abnorgenic processes combine to lead to severe disease inmality is not clear, but the extremely strong correlation
36
American Society of Hematology
vokes several basic processes: rapid expansion of infected RBC mass, destruction of both infected and
uninfected RBC, microvascular obstruction, and inflammatory processes that combine to lead to reduced tissue
perfusion. This in turn may lead to downstream processes
at a cellular level that further exacerbate the situation.
These general processes, which affect many tissue beds,
may also be focused on specific organs in some situations, for instance the brain in cerebral malaria or the
placenta during malaria in pregnancy. This could reflect
both host-specific factors (for example, an increased likelihood to express particular receptors on cerebral endothelium) and parasite-specific factors (for example, the
expression of molecules on the infected RBC surface
that are particularly suited for binding to certain receptors). In this article we review the major advances in
pathogenesis with the hope that they will lead to new
tools to prevent disease before children are so sick that
they need hospitalization.
Although the disease must ultimately be understood
in humans, much of our knowledge of pathogenesis depends on studies in nonhuman species and in vitro culture of P. falciparum. Invasion of hepatocytes and RBC
studied in rodent malarias P. berghei and P. yoelii and
the rhesus malaria P. knowlesi, respectively, provided
insight about these processes. Inflammatory cytokines
are often studied in rodent malarias. In addition, these
species are important for screening of drugs and vaccines, including human malarias in New World primates.
The Plasmodium Life Cycle and Pathogenesis
P. falciparum and, to a much lesser extent, P. vivax14 are
the main causes of disease and death from malaria (Figure 2, see Color Figures, page 512). Mosquitoes inject
parasites (sporozoites) into the subcutaneous tissue and
less frequently directly into the bloodstream; from there,
sporozoites travel to the liver. Recent evidence indicates
that sporozoites pass through several hepatocytes before
invasion is followed by parasite development.15 The
co-receptor on sporozoites for invasion involves, in part,
the thrombospondin domains on the circumsporozoite
protein and on thrombospondin-related adhesive protein
(TRAP). These domains bind specifically to heparin sulfate proteoglycans on hepatocytes in the region in apposition to sinusoidal endothelium and Kuppfer cells.16
Within the hepatocyte, each sporozoite develops into tens
of thousands of merozoites, each able to invade a RBC
on release from the liver. Disease begins only once the
asexual parasite multiplies within RBC. This is the only
gateway to disease. P. falciparum and P. vivax within
RBC develop over 48 hours, producing around 20 merozoites in a mature parasite, each able to invade other
RBC. A small proportion of asexual parasites converts
Hematology 2002
to gametocytes that are critical for the transmission of
the infection to others through female anopheline mosquitoes but cause no disease. Here the strategy of P. vivax
differs from that of P. falciparum. P. vivax develops into
gametocytes soon after release of merozoites from the
liver; P. falciparum gametocytes develop much later.
Early treatment of clinical malaria attacks by
anti-bloodstage chemotherapy for P. falciparum also kills
the developing gametocytes; P. vivax transmits before
the symptomatic stage of the disease.
Invasion of RBCs
The sequence of invasion is probably similar for all Plasmodium spp. The parasite must engage receptors17 on
RBC for binding and undergo apical reorientation,18 junction formation,19 and signaling. The parasite then induces
a vacuole derived from the RBC plasma membrane and
enters the vacuole by a moving junction. Three organelles
on the invasive (apical) end of parasites (rhoptries,
micronemes, and dense granules) define the phylum
Apicomplexa. Receptors for invasion of RBC by merozoites and for invasion of liver by sporozoites are found
in micronemes,20 on the cell surface, and in rhoptries.
The distribution of these receptors within an organelle
may protect the parasite from antibody-mediated neutralization, as the release after contact with the RBC may
limit their exposure to antibody.
A critical question in parasite biology remains the
identification of the signaling pathways to release
organellar contents on contact with a host RBC (Figure
2, page 512). Malaria parasites have intracellular signaling pathways through phosphoinositide, cyclic AMP
(cAMP), and calcium-dependent pathways. What remains completely unknown is which merozoite surface
molecules recognize the RBC surface and signal for the
invasion process. These events include release of critical molecules from apical organelles and the initiation
of the actin-myosin moving junction that brings the parasite within the vacuole that forms in the RBC. The TRAP
protein interacts with skeletal proteins in malaria sporozoites and in Toxoplasma gondii,21 but the equivalent
molecule for merozoites has yet to be identified.
Both P. falciparum and P. vivax can cause severe
anemia, but only P. falciparum causes the multiple complications of cerebral malaria, hypoglycemia, metabolic
acidosis, and respiratory distress. Certain differences in
the biology of the two parasites partially explain the differences in patterns of disease. First, P. falciparum can
invade a large percentage of the RBC, whereas P. vivax
is limited to reticulocytes. Similar differences are found
between virulent and avirulent P. yoelii. Both invade
reticulocytes preferentially, but once the reticulocytes
are consumed, virulent P. yoelii can invade all RBC, lead37
ing to higher parasitemia and death. A recent study of
severe compared to uncomplicated falciparum malaria
suggested a similar pattern, with the virulent P.
falciparum invading all RBC and the avirulent parasites
invading only a subpopulation.22
A second difference is the surprising redundancy of
invasion pathways in P. falciparum, lacking in P. vivax.
P. vivax invades only Duffy blood group-positive RBC23
and is largely limited to reticulocytes. In West Africa,
where the Duffy blood group is missing on RBC, P. vivax
essentially disappeared. The Duffy negative blood group
has also occurred independently in Papua New Guinea,24
an area of high endemicity of P. vivax. The limitations
in invasion of P. vivax have led to the discovery of two
families of parasite receptors: i) the parasite molecule
that binds to the Duffy blood group system and Duffy
binding-like (DBL) homologous proteins of P. falciparum and P. knowlesi,25 and ii) the parasite reticulocyte-binding proteins of P. vivax26 and reticulocyte binding-like (RBL) homologous proteins of P. falciparum27
and P. yoelii.28 The various members of the DBL and
RBL families may recognize different RBC receptors
than the Duffy blood group or the receptor on reticulocytes. The receptor grouping into DBL and RBL refers
to the family of homologous parasite proteins, not the
specificity on the RBC for binding.
There is a large family of RBL genes in P. yoelii.
Each of the merozoites within a single infected RBC
can express a different member of the RBL family.29 If
each has a different RBC-binding specificity, then the
parasite has a greater chance for survival. Thus, although
the full details for the DBL and RBL families are unknown, they clearly determine much of the flexibility
for invasion by the various Plasmodium spp. This flexibility, in turn, determines the maximum parasitemia and
disease caused by the various parasites.
P. falciparum can use its multiple redundant alternative pathways to invade at equal or reduced efficiency
RBC lacking a particular receptor such as sialic acid.30,31
Three sialoglycoprotein-dependent pathways involving
RBC and parasite co-receptors have been identified:
i) glycophorin A and the parasite DBL protein,
EBA-175,32 ii) glycophorin C/D and the DBL parasite
protein, BAEBL,33 and iii) a trypsin-resistant pathway
involving a P. falciparum RBL protein.27 A fourth may
involve sialic acid on glycophorin B.27
Despite markedly reduced invasion of glycophorin A-negative RBC, only glycophorin B mutations
occur in Africa. Gerbich RBC fail to express glycophorin D and express an altered glycophorin C and have
reduced binding to the parasite molecule, BAEBL.
Gerbich RBC are rare in most parts of the world except
in the falciparum-endemic regions of Papua New Guinea,
38
where the allele frequency approaches 50%.34 Such redundancy and alternative pathways are a major advantage to the survival of P. falciparum in response to
changes in host genetics. The parasite, however, may
become less virulent as it adapts to survival in these deficient RBC.
Studying the DBL and RBL families has begun to
yield a molecular understanding of the diverse invasion
pathways for P. falciparum and other Plasmodium spp.
Although other parasite proteins on the merozoite surface and in apical organelles have been proposed as receptors,35-37 there is no direct evidence so far. Because
invasion is such a complex series of events from RBC
binding, to apical reorientation, to entry, it seems likely
that multiple proteins are involved for efficient invasion.
For example, evidence has been presented that invasion
requires cleavage of a RBC surface protein by a parasite
serine protease.38 This parasite enzyme has yet to be identified. Thus, the molecular and cellular events surrounding each step in invasion still remain to be elucidated.
Understanding these pathways will give insight into parasite virulence and will facilitate rational vaccine design
against merozoite invasion.
Binding of RBC to
Vascular Endothelium and Placenta
An important difference between P. falciparum and other
human malarias is the way that P. falciparum modifies
the surface of the RBC for adherence of both asexual
parasites and gametocytes to the endothelium and asexual
parasites within placenta. As a result, only ring forms of
P. falciparum are found within the circulating blood (for
review see refs. 39-41). The surface of P. falciparum trophozoite- and schizont-infected RBC is covered with
knob-like excrescences that are the contact points with
host cells.42 The adherence protects the parasite from
destruction, as non-adherent mature parasitized RBC are
rapidly cleared within the spleen.43
Trying to decipher the highly complex and pathogenic adhesion process emphasizes how much we have
learned and how little we understand. To answer whether
and how sequestration can lead to pathogenesis, we
should first look at how the parasite sequesters. The P.
falciparum adhesion process is comparable to adhesion
of leukocytes, where most parasites first tether, then roll,
before becoming firmly adherent.44,45 Most host receptors are involved with tethering and rolling but are unable to support firm adhesion under flow on their own.44,46
Binding to these host receptors is important, as it significantly increases adhesion that may allow the parasite to efficiently bind to endothelium of various organs.47
Only two receptors, CD36 and chondroitin sulfate A
(CSA), provide stable stationary adherence.44,46
American Society of Hematology
Parasites sequester in various organs including heart,
lung, brain, liver, kidney, subcutaneous tissues, and placenta. The various endothelial cells in these organs and
syncytiotrophoblasts in placenta express different and
variable amounts of host receptors. To successfully adhere to these cells, the parasite can bind to a large number of receptors39 (Figure 3, see Color Figures, page
512). The adhesion phenotype is not homogenous, and
different parasites can bind to variable numbers and combinations of host receptors.48,49 This variability is believed
to affect the tissue distribution and pathogenesis of parasites.
Amazingly, a single parasite protein, the P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) expressed at the infected erythrocyte surface, mediates its
binding to the various receptors.39-41 PfEMP1 is encoded
by the large and diverse var gene family that is involved
in clonal antigenic variation and plays a central role in
P. falciparum pathogenesis.50-52 The multiple adhesion
domains located at the extracellular region of PfEMP1
can simultaneously recognize several host receptors.
These domains contain variable numbers of different
(5 types) DBL domains, so named for the homology to
the DBL domains involved in RBC invasion and 1-2 cysteine-rich interdomain regions (CIDR).52,53 The binding
domains for several host receptors were recently mapped
to various DBL and CIDR domains.39,54 The diversity
within this gene family is extensive, and numerous var
genes appear in the parasite population. Although each
parasite expresses a single var gene55 (of 50 in its genome),
this can change at a rate of up to 2% per generation.56
In most cases, the binding to host endothelium does
not lead to pathogenesis, as most infections result in malaria that is devoid of complications.57 What leads to the
transition from uncomplicated to a serious infection such
as cerebral malaria is unclear at present. An intriguing
possibility is that expression of particular binding properties will lead to distinct patterns of sequestration and
to pathogenic consequences. One example is the sequestration of infected RBC within the placenta that causes
premature delivery, low birth weight, and increased
mortality in the newborn and anemia in the mother. Parasitized RBC isolated from placentas have a unique adhesion property different from parasites collected from
non-pregnant individuals.48,58 These parasites bound to
CSA and failed to adhere to CD36, the critical host receptor for sequestration in microvasculature. The apparent dichotomy in adhesion to these receptors was selected to allow the parasite to sequester not to endothelium but in placenta, perhaps a site of reduced immunity.
Indeed, CSA-binding parasites express PfEMP1 with a
DBLγ domain that binds CSA and a non-CD36-binding
CIDR1.59,60 In contrast, CD36-adherent parasites express
Hematology 2002
a PfEMP1 with a CD36-binding CIDR1.60
Sequestration of parasites in the brain may be related to cerebral malaria and may involve the ICAM-1
receptor.41 Although infected RBC bind to brain endothelium at autopsy, it is unknown whether this represents a different distribution of adhesion from uncomplicated malaria. An increase in ICAM-1 expression in
brain endothelium may explain differences in parasite
adhesion in cerebral malaria.61,62 The role of sequestration in other severe complications of malaria remains
unclear. Pathogenic connections between adhesion and
host receptors are supported by both a nonsense in the
gene of the adhesion receptor CD36 that is associated
with protection from severe malaria, and the link between
complement receptor 1 and ABO blood group antigens
and rosetting (the binding of uninfected RBCs).40,63,64 Several investigators have suggested that simultaneous binding to multiple receptors might be associated with more
severe cases of malaria,65 but specific data are lacking.
Some properties, such as rosetting40 and clumping,66 appear at higher frequencies in cases of severe disease,
but these associations have not been found in all studies
and their effect on pathogenesis remains obscure. One
possibility is that competition (for adhesion) between
parasites drives some of them to develop new adhesion properties and sequester in less desirable locations that lead to pathogenesis.
Although dissecting various individual interactions
is a good experimental approach, the outcome of an infection and progression into pathology depends on the
specific and dynamic combination of the host and the
parasite properties. Clinical disease also changes with
age, immunity, and transmission rates.57 Immunity to malaria plays a major role in controlling disease and pathogenesis. The properties of PfEMP1 as an adhesion protein (to avoid parasite destruction within the spleen) cannot be separated from its involvement in immune evasion by clonal antigenic variation that can lead to chronicity of the infection. Even after many exposures, humans are not refractory to malaria parasites but develop
clinical immunity that prevents symptomatic disease.
This type of immunity limits disease and, although the
individual may harbor low numbers of parasites, they
do not develop into a symptomatic infection.57 The role
of anti-PfEMP1 antibodies in protection from pathogenic
infections is highlighted again in placental malaria. Exposure to parasites that sequester in the placenta during
pregnancy induces strain-transcending immunity that
blocks adhesion of infected erythrocytes to CSA and may
protect the mother and fetus from placental malaria in
subsequent pregnancies.67
During the development of clinical immunity, particularly during early childhood, strain-specific antibod39
ies to PfEMP1 play a significant role by preventing infection with previously encounter isolates.68,69 This protection can be significant during and after infections with
virulent isolates. Bull et al69,70 showed evidence for the
existence of rare and prevalent isolates and that parasites causing severe disease tend to express a subset of
variant surface antigens (PfEMP1). Moreover, these isolates were expressed preferentially in children who were
less able to recognize (by antibody-mediated agglutination) a large number of isolates. Children exposed once
or twice to non-cerebral severe malaria acquire immunity that protects them from this form of the disease.71
Hence, exposure to pathogenic forms of P. falciparum
can protect against these parasites, leading to selection
of possibly less virulent parasites in subsequent infections. Despite its variation, regions of PfEMP1 are restricted by function (e.g., binding to CD36 or CSA), and
these regions may be potential vaccine targets.
How adhesion progresses to pathology is a major
question that remains unresolved. Several mechanisms
that might cause damage to host endothelium and organs have been proposed, including obstruction of blood
flow and systemic or local production and deposition of
proinflammatory cytokines (see below). Parasite adhesion can also affect the endothelium by inducing or
blocking signal transduction mediated by host receptors
such as CD36. The recent advances in adhesion research
will hopefully provide leads for the mechanism of adhesion related pathogenesis.
The Proinflammatory Immune Response
and Pathogenesis
Antibodies and the proinflammatory response protect
against the asexual blood stages of some rodent malarias and probably also human malaria. The protection
mediated by the proinflammatory response may relate
to the cytokines TNF-α and IFN-γ and the release of
mediators such as nitric oxide (NO). Clark proposed that
mediators, especially NO, are also central to disease.72
It is perfectly logical that these are involved in bone
marrow suppression and cerebral malaria, but the data
are lacking to prove this role. Furthermore, no model
exists for the study of cerebral malaria. One hypothesis
suggests that TNF-α induces endothelial cells from brain
to express ICAM-1,73 as vessels in the brain have increased expression of ICAM-1 in cerebral malaria.62
Although NO has been proposed as the cause of cerebral malaria, NO is at higher levels systemically in uncomplicated malaria than in cerebral malaria.74 Coma
could be caused by local increases in NO in the brain
and not increased levels in blood, but this has not been
measured. Indeed, total nitrate plus nitrite levels in the
CSF of children with cerebral malaria are low, and it has
40
been suggested that this may exacerbate n-methyl-Daspartate-mediated neurotoxicity due to excitotoxins
such as quinolinic acid.75
Data suggesting that a toxin of malarial origin drives
the proinflammatory response are interesting,76,77 but the
physiologic significance is unproven at present. The evidence that a particular molecule is involved in induction
of the proinflammatory response was developed by an
assay for the release of TNF-α by macrophages in vitro.
Isolation of subcellular components from the parasite
and the in vitro assay led to the identification of the GPI
anchor from parasite proteins MSP1 and MSP2 as an
inducer of proinflammatory cytokines. Antibodies to the
GPI anchor were associated with lack of disease in
adults,78 but proof that this is causally related is lacking.
Modifications in the immune response to malaria
that may not be malaria specific have been identified.
Infection with P. falciparum causes apoptosis of mononuclear cells in infected humans.79 In an animal model,
infection with a rodent malaria to which they had previously been exposed led to apoptosis of T cells immune
to malaria and not those immune to ova, a malaria-unrelated antigen.80 The cells that were eliminated were
proinflammatory T cells, producing IFN-γ and IL-2, but
not IL-4. It is unclear whether this is specific to malaria
or a more general phenomenon.
Study of genetic differences between populations
may inform our understanding of the immune system.
Fulanis, an ethnic group in Burkina Faso, have higher
antibody to many malarial antigens and less disease than
two other ethnic groups in the same village who are bitten by equal numbers of infected mosquitoes.81 The
molecular basis is unknown, but the innate immune system may be interacting with the adaptive system to increase antibody titers. The importance of these differences also comes from the study of insecticide-impregnated bednets.82 The use of insecticide-treated bednets
has reduced the infection in Fulanis, but not among other
ethnic groups in the same area. Possibly, the higher antibody titers in Fulanis are sufficient to take advantage of
the reduction in infectious bites as a result of insecticide–treated bednets.
Perspectives
The clinical outcome of an infection in a child in Africa
depends on multiple factors (Figure 1). In our attempt to
understand disease, we often take a reductionist view to
study individual components of the parasite and human
in an attempt to identify factors that have a major impact on disease outcome. Such factors can be targets for
intervention through development of new tools such as
vaccines. Success in the development and implementation of these new tools will depend on a connection with
American Society of Hematology
scientists from endemic countries of Africa who have a
better understanding of local customs and are experienced in communicating with the poorest people in villages of Africa.
II. CLINICAL AND HEMATOLOGICAL
FEATURES OF MALARIA
Climent Casals-Pascual, MB, MSc, and
David J. Roberts,* DPhil, MRCP, MRCPath
Malaria is a major public health problem in tropical areas, and it is estimated that malaria is responsible for 1
to 3 million deaths and 300-500 million infections annually. The vast majority of morbidity and mortality from
malaria is caused by infection with P. falciparum, although P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae also are responsible for human infections. This review will focus
on the principal clinical and hematological features of
falciparum malaria and also highlight some of the particular problems faced by those managing patients and
potential carriers of malaria in nonendemic areas.
Clinical Features of Malaria
The signs and symptoms of malaria infection in humans
are caused by the asexual blood stage of the parasite.
The ratio of numbers of deaths to infections from malaria suggests that infection with blood stage parasites
may result in a wide range of outcomes and pathologies.
Indeed, the spectrum of severity ranges from asymptomatic infection to rapidly progressive, fatal illness. The
clinical presentation of malaria infection is particularly
influenced by host age, by immune status with respect
to malaria and pregnancy, and by the species, genotype,
and perhaps the geographical origin of the parasite. The
characteristics of falciparum malaria have been most
extensively studied in African children, and it is most
appropriate to begin by describing the features of malaria in this group.
* Blood Research Laboratory, National Blood Service - Oxford
Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, Oxford, OX3
9DU, United Kingdom
Acknowledgments. The work of Dr. Roberts is supported by
the National Blood Service and the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute. The work of Dr. Casals-Pascual is supported by the
University of Oxford. We thank Professors Marsh, Snow,
Warrell, and White and Drs. Newton, English, Crawley,
Krishna, and colleagues in Oxford for very many helpful
discussions.
Hematology 2002
Malaria in African Children
Symptoms may appear on average 12 days (but occasionally 6 months or more) after inoculation of sporozoites into the bloodstream. An infection may be asymptomatic in those with acquired or innate immunity to
malaria; others with no or partial immunity may suffer
from a severe acute illness.
Uncomplicated or mild malaria
Prodromal symptoms of malaria include headache
(which is often severe and dominates the presenting complaint), myalgia, and coughing that precede the typical
sequence of shaking chills, fever, and sweating associated with a paroxysm of fever. The erythrocytic cycle in
falciparum malaria is usually synchronized so, in the
initial stages of infection, fever occurs on days 1 and 3
(and thus is a tertian fever). In advanced infections the
pattern of fever becomes less regular, even continuous.
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain may
accompany fever. In an uncomplicated infection, signs
are few, with the notable absence of lymphadenopathy
or rash, but include splenomegaly and mild jaundice. If
the course of treatment is incomplete or if the parasites
are resistant to the treatment given, then parasites may
recrudesce and once more cause a patent infection. Follow-up of treated cases is therefore essential.
Severe malaria
In some children, malaria causes more serious disorders.
They may present with prostration or inability to take
oral fluids or, in younger children, inability to suckle.
As disease progresses they may exhibit a number of
syndrome(s) of severe disease including coma, respiratory distress, anemia, and hypoglycemia and may also
have a high rate of bacteremia.1 On admission, children
usually give a history of only a few days’ illness.
Exclusion of intercurrent diseases may be difficult.
The parasitemia is an unreliable guide to the disease severity, and severe disease may occur in the face of undetectable parasitemia where the parasites are sequestered and their growth cycle is tightly synchronized.
Thus, clinical assessment must always seek to exclude
other illnesses, in particular acute respiratory infection,
bacterial meningitis, encephalitis, Reye’s syndrome and
septicemia which may mimic respiratory distress, coma,
and/or multisystem disease due to malaria.
Cerebral malaria. The cardinal signs of ‘cerebral
malaria’ are reduced consciousness and coma. A core
of patients have signs consistent with a diffuse metabolic encephalopathy, although patients who present with
reduced consciousness may have other distinct pathophysiological disturbances including seizures, metabolic
acidosis, and hypoglycemia. The pathology of ‘cerebral
41
malaria’ is linked with the sequestration of parasitized
erythrocytes in postcapillary venules of the cerebral circulation, although the functional disturbance(s) that lead
to an encephalopathy are poorly understood.2,3
The depth of coma can be measured at the bedside
using a simplification of the Glasgow coma scale devised initially in Blantyre, Malawi.4 As unconsciousness
deepens, the patient fails to localize pain and may demonstrate abnormal posturing (decorticate rigidity, decerebrate rigidity, and opisthotonus), pupillary changes,
absent corneal reflexes, and abnormal respiratory patterns including hypoventilation and periodic breathing.5
Retinal hemorrhages are common.
Seizures are a prominent feature of cerebral malaria.
Children may suffer simple febrile seizures, have prolonged or multiple seizures, or have features suggesting
a focus of epileptic activity, including localized motor
seizures. Status epilepticus and prolonged post-ictal periods are not uncommon. Interestingly, simultaneous
EEGs and video recordings of comatose clinical patients
have shown that generalized seizures may occur with
minimal physical signs, such as twitching of finger(s),
conjugate or nystagmoid deviation of the eyes, or hypoventilation with excessive salivation.6 Such patients may
recover consciousness after anticonvulsant therapy. Similarly, children presenting with metabolic acidosis and/or
hypoglycemia may recover after appropriate treatment.
The progression of signs in cerebral malaria is variable, but sometimes a cephalo-caudal progression of
signs is seen including isolated cranial nerve palsies and
brain stem signs culminating in respiratory arrest. This
sequence of events and direct measurement of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure in children presenting in
a coma has suggested that, unlike nonimmune adults with
cerebral malaria, at least some children with cerebral
malaria may have intracranial hypertension.7 This has
led to re-evaluation of the risk of early lumbar puncture
in excluding meningitis in parasitemic, comatose children, and now some clinicians suggest delaying lumbar
puncture and commencing empirical antibiotic treatment,
to cover bacterial meningitis, with concurrent antimalarial treatment.8
Children who recover from cerebral malaria usually do so within 48 hours, although a significant minority suffers from neurological sequelae. Up to 15% of
children may have hemiplegia, ataxia, dysphasia, hearing difficulty, visual problems including cortical blindness, or epilepsy. Over half of these children make a full
recovery, but there is a residue of serious disability caused
by cerebral malaria, including abnormal cognitive function and behavior.8,9
Anemia. The blood stage of falciparum malaria may
cause life-threatening anemia, and hemoglobin of less
42
than 5 g/dL is considered to represent severe disease.
Anemia may become worse after treatment begins, particularly if the parasitemia is high. The anemia is typically normocytic and normochromic, with a notable absence of reticulocytes, although microcytosis and hypochromia may be present due to the very high frequency
of alpha and beta thalassemia traits and/or iron deficiency
in many endemic areas.10 However, difficulties in assessing, not only the absolute, but also the ‘functional’ iron
stores complicate the diagnosis and treatment of iron
deficiency in the context of acute malaria infection. In
such circumstances the only diagnostic test of iron deficiency may be the response to iron supplementation. The
indication(s) for and duration of treatment have not, however, been established. Although chronic hemolysis may
increase folate requirements, a frank deficiency is uncommon in children presenting with acute malaria, at
least in East Africa.
The pathophysiology of severe anemia is a complex
but relatively neglected area of study. Certainly, malaria
gives ample reasons for both increased destruction and
reduced production of red cells. Red blood cells are destroyed as parasites complete their growth cycle, although some parasites may be removed from erythrocytes as immature ring forms by phagocytic cells.11 Infected erythrocytes may also be phagocytosed by macrophages following opsonization by immunoglobulins and/
or complement components. Other effector cells and
mechanisms are less well defined but may include antibody-dependent cytotoxicity and natural killer (NK) cells.
The survival of uninfected erythrocytes is also reduced. The activity and the number of macrophages are
increased in malarial infection. Moreover, the signals
for recognition of uninfected erythrocytes for removal
by macrophages are enhanced. Uninfected erythrocytes
bind increased amounts of immunoglobulin and/or
complement as detected in the direct antiglobulin test
(DAT or Coomb’s Test).12,13 The specificity of the immunoglobulins on the surface of the red cells has remained
controversial. These antibodies do not have a particular
specificity but are more likely to represent immune complexes absorbed onto the surface of red blood cells by
complement receptors including CR1 (CD35).14
No discussion of the pathology of malarial anemia
is complete without consideration of ‘blackwater fever.’
The sudden appearance of hemoglobin in the urine indicating severe intravascular hemolysis leading to hemoglobinemia and hemoglobinuria received particular attention in early studies of anemia in expatriates living in
endemic areas. There was an association between blackwater fever and the irregular use of quinine for chemoprophylaxis. This drug can act as a hapten and stimulate
production of a drug-dependent complement-fixing anAmerican Society of Hematology
tibody. Recent studies of sudden intravascular hemolysis have shown it is rare in Africa, but more common in
Southeast Asia and Papua New Guinea, where it is associated with G6PD deficiency and treatment with a
variety of drugs including quinine, mefloquine, and
artesunate.15
Reticulocytopenia has been observed in numerous
clinical studies of malarial anemia. The histopathological study of the bone marrow of children with malarial
anemia shows erythroid hyperplasia, with dyserythropoiesis, cytoplasmic and nuclear bridging, and irregular
nuclear outline.16 The functional abnormality has not
been defined, but an increased proportion of the erythroid progenitors are found in the G2 phase compared with
normal controls.
The prime candidates for the host factors mediating dyserythropoiesis have been growth factors and cytokines. Serum erythropoietin (Epo) was appropriately
raised in a study of African children with malarial anemia. However, other studies in adults from Thailand and
Sudan have concluded that the Epo concentration, although
raised, was inappropriate for the degree of anemia.
The concentrations of tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) and interferon (IFN)-γ have been correlated with the
severity of the disease,17 and high levels of TNF-α have
been shown to suppress erythropoiesis. These cytokines
may also contribute to reduced production of Epo and to
increased erythrophagocytosis.
The possibility has been raised that high levels of
the Th2-type cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) might prevent the development of severe malarial anemia. Low
levels of IL-10 have been described in African children
with severe malarial anemia.18 However, the mechanism
of protection from anemia by IL-10 is unclear.
The hypothesis that parasite products directly stimulate the production of inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-α, has been widely promoted. The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor of malarial membrane
proteins may cause cellular dysfunction, but a role for
this toxin in dyserythropoiesis remains to be established.19 Other toxic products may exist. During its blood
stage, the malaria parasite proteolyses host hemoglobin,
releasing heme as a by-product. β-Hematin forms as a
crystalline cyclic dimer of oxidized heme and is
complexed with protein and lipid products as malarial
pigment or hemozoin. The function of monocytes and
macrophages is severely inhibited after ingestion of
hemozoin. Here, the biologically active moieties may
be lipoperoxides such as 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) and
15(R, S) hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (HETE) produced
by oxidation of membrane lipids (reviewed in 20). Their
effect on other cellular functions, such as erythropoiesis, has not been established.
Hematology 2002
Anemia in falciparum malaria is clearly multifactorial and there is a strong argument that erythrocyte destruction and ineffective erythropoiesis play equal parts
in the etiology of malarial anemia.
Respiratory distress and metabolic acidosis. Respiratory distress is common in severe disease and has been
shown to be an independent predictor of poor outcome.21
It is defined by tachypnea, by deep, gasping breathing,
and by use of the secondary muscles of respiration and
usually represents metabolic acidosis, although acute respiratory infection must be carefully excluded.22,23 Acidosis is largely due to excessive lactic acid although other
anions may contribute to the anion gap. Salicylate toxicity can also cause a metabolic acidosis when inappropriate home treatment with aspirin occurs. Some children presenting with respiratory distress are dehydrated
and may be resuscitated with saline. However, the majority of children presenting with respiratory distress are
severely anemic, have a metabolic acidosis secondary
to reduced oxygen-carrying capacity, and respond to
rapid transfusion of fresh blood (reviewed in 24). However, in pregnant women with malaria and nonimmune
adults with malaria, transfusion must be given with careful hemodynamic monitoring (see below).
A minority of children with respiratory distress does
not respond to appropriate resuscitation. They probably
represent a heterogeneous clinical group and may have
renal failure, systemic bacterial infection, or a more profound syndrome of systemic disturbance due to malaria
parasites.
Hypoglycemia. Hypoglycemia is most common in
children and in pregnant women with severe disease.4,25,26
Hypoglycemia may be evident at presentation or may
occur during treatment and sometimes in the face of
glucose infusions. In children, insulin levels are appropriate and hypoglycemia appears more likely to follow
impaired hepatic gluconeogenesis and increased consumption of glucose in peripheral tissues and by parasites.27 In adults, hypoglycemia has been associated with
hyperinsulinemia, and it has been postulated that malaria-derived products and/or quinine directly or indirectly stimulate the beta cells of the pancreatic islets.25
Whatever the pathogenesis of the condition, it is clear that
all severely ill patients with malaria should be carefully
monitored and aggressively treated for hypoglycemia.
Outcome of malaria infection
The prognosis of severe falciparum malaria is poor, with
a case fatality rate of 15-20% in African children. Mortality is higher when multiple syndromes of severe disease are present (Figure 4). A number of clinical and
laboratory parameters have been associated with poor
outcomes, including deep coma, respiratory distress,
43
Malaria in Nonimmune Adults
Many travellers (and returning residents with significant
levels of clinical immunity) present with what is effectively mild malaria as seen in African children. However, in nonimmunes, severe disease can progress very
rapidly and cause life-threatening illness. In this group,
multiorgan failure is more prominent than in children
with malaria, and some features of the syndromes of
malaria differ from those described above for African
children (Table 1).30
Figure 4. The spectrum of clinical malaria in a malaria endemic
area from a series of 1800 children admitted to hospital in
Kilifi, Kenya.
The areas of the circles in this Venn diagram are roughly proportional to the number of children in each group. The case fatality rate
is given in brackets.
Adapted from Marsh et al. N Engl J Med. 1995;332:1399.21
hypoglycemia (blood or plasma glucose < 2.2 mM),
metabolic acidosis (lactate > 5 mM), raised CSF lactate,
renal failure (creatinine > 265 µmol), hyperparasitemia,
appearance of pigmented parasitized erythrocytes, and
leucocytosis.4,21,22,28 Severe malaria in nonimmune adults
also has a high case-specific mortality, and here the rate
is probably dependent on the availability of critical care
facilities to support multiorgan failure (Table 1).
Syndromes of Severe Malaria at Different Ages
One unexplained but consistent feature of the epidemiology of clinical malaria is the age distribution of syndromes of severe disease. Children born in endemic areas are protected from severe malaria in the first 6 months
of life by the passive transfer of maternal immunoglobulins and by expression of fetal hemoglobin. Beyond
infancy, the presentation of disease changes from predominantly severe anemia in children aged between 1
and 3 in areas of high transmission to predominantly
cerebral malaria in older children in areas of lower transmission.29 In this light, the picture of cerebral malaria
with multisystem disease in nonimmune adults represents an extreme end of the spectrum in the relationship
between age, transmission, and syndrome of severe disease. The reasons for this pattern are unknown but probably include age-specific responses to malaria and also
cross-reactive responses activated during infection in
older children.
44
Cerebral malaria
Coma is a very prominent feature of severe illness in
nonimmunes, although neurological sequelae are recorded less frequently. However, epilepsy and psychiatric disturbances have been found at increased frequency
in a large series of Vietnam veterans who suffered from
cerebral malaria.31
Table 1. The presenting features of malaria in African children
and Papua New Guinean adults admitted to hospital, by WHO
criteria for severe falciparum malaria.*
African
Children†
Nonimmune
Adults‡
Prevalence (%)
Prevalence (%)
Defining criteria
Coma
10.0
17.1
Severe anemia
17.6
10.0
Respiratory distress
13.7
–
Hypoglycemia
13.2
5.7
Circulatory collapse
0.4
0
Renal failure
0.1
22.9
Spontaneous bleeding
0.1
0.1
Hemoglobinemia
0.1
0.1
Acidosis
63.6
NA
Repeated convulsions
18.3
0.3
8.2
37.1
4.7
45.7
Supporting criteria
Impaired consciousness
Jaundice
Prostration
12.2
–
Hyperpyrexia
10.6
20
8.9
40
Hyperparasitemia
*The distribution of overlapping syndromes for children with severe
malaria in African children and the case fatality rates are given in
Figure 4. The case fatality rates for severely ill nonimmunes depend
on the available supporting facilities. Adapted from Newton and
Krishna, 1996.
Abbreviations: NA, not applicable.
† Marsh et al. N Engl J Med. 1995;332:1399.21
‡ Lalloo et al. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1996;55:119.30
American Society of Hematology
Respiratory failure
Deteriorating respiratory function with widespread pulmonary edema may develop during the disease and carries a very poor prognosis. Some cases of pulmonary
edema may be secondary to fluid overload and/or rapid
correction of dehydration. However, other patients have
adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) with a normal pulmonary wedge pressure, suggesting that the primary abnormality is endothelial damage and excessive
permeability. The primary causes of endothelial damage are unknown.32
Renal failure
Renal impairment is common in severe malaria in
nonimmune adults, and the microscopic pathology is
acute tubular necrosis: glomerulonephritis is rare.33 In
some cases acute tubular necrosis may be precipitated
by intravascular hemolysis. The pathogenesis in other
cases is unclear. Patients may require short-term dialysis for acidosis, fluid overload, hyperkalemia, or rapidly
rising creatinine.
ened individuals. Nevertheless, P. vivax malaria has been
clearly associated with anemia during pregnancy and
with low birth weight in children of affected mothers. In
these cases, cytokines or other inflammatory mediators
appear to cause placental dysfunction.35 P. malariae infection is also rarely fatal but is distinguished by the
persistence of blood-stage parasites for up to 40 years.
It can, however, cause a progressive and fatal nephrotic
syndrome.
White Cell, Platelet, and Coagulation Changes
in Acute Malaria Infection
Changes in leucocyte and platelet counts are present in
malaria. In addition, there are significant effects on leucocyte function.
Malaria in Pregnancy
During pregnancy, women are both more susceptible to
malaria infection and also more likely to develop hypoglycemia and pulmonary edema. In pregnant women,
malaria infection, often without fever, may nevertheless
cause anemia and placental dysfunction. This effect is
greatest in primigravidae and has been attributed to the
adhesion of parasitized erythrocytes to chrondrotin sulfate A and hyaluronic acid in the placenta. Fetal growth
is impaired and babies born to women with placental
malaria are on average 100 g lighter than controls born
to women without malaria. The subsequent contribution
of malaria to infant mortality is substantial.34
White cells
Malaria is accompanied by a modest leucocytosis, although leukopenia may also occur. Occasionally, leukemoid reactions have been observed. Leukocytosis has
been associated with severe disease.4 A high neutrophil
count may also suggest intercurrent bacterial infection.
Monocytosis and increased numbers of circulating lymphocytes are also seen in acute infection, although the
significance of these changes is not established.36 However, malarial pigment is often seen in neutrophils and
in monocytes and has been associated with severe disease and unfavorable outcome.37
There is a significant dysfunction of myeloid cells
in malaria. The adhesive phenotypes expressed by
falciparum-infected erythrocytes were previously
thought simply to permit sequestration of parasites in
the peripheral circulation. Recent work has illuminated
how malaria-infected erythrocytes may modulate the
function of macrophages and myeloid dendritic cells
through the adhesion of malaria-infected cells to CD36
and/or CD51 on host cells (for review, see Urban and
Roberts20). Furthermore, the function of monocytes and
macrophages may be inhibited by the action of hemozoin
from digested hemoglobin.38 These observations suggest
that the inhibition of phagocytosis and of other inflammatory responses, mediated by adhesion of infected
erythrocytes to myeloid cells and by ingestion of
hemozoin, may influence the outcome of infection and
facilitate survival of both parasite and host.
Features of P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae Infection
In P. vivax and P. ovale malaria high parasitemias are
rare, as invasion of erythrocytes is limited to reticulocytes. The parasites do not appear to sequester in the
peripheral circulation or cause organ-specific syndromes.
Mortality is limited to occasional deaths from splenic
rupture or from intercurrent illnesses in already weak-
Platelets
Thrombocytopenia is almost invariable in malaria and
so may be helpful as a sensitive but nonspecific marker
of active infection. However, severe thrombocytopenia
(< 50 × 109 l–1) is rare. Increased removal of platelets
may follow absorption of immune complexes, but there
is no evidence for platelet-specific alloantibodies. By
Bleeding disorders
Disordered coagulation and clinical evidence of bleeding are not infrequent in adults, and patients may present
with bleeding at injection sites, gums, or epistaxis.
Other complications
Hemoglobinuria secondary to intravascular hemolysis
and jaundice are more common in adults than in children. As in children, concurrent bacteremia is common.
Hematology 2002
45
analogy with erythropoiesis, there may be a defect in
thrombopoiesis but this has not been established.
Thrombocytopenia is not associated with disease
severity, although, somewhat paradoxically, platelets
have been shown to contribute to disease pathology in
animal and in human malaria.39 Moreover, in human
infections, platelets may form ‘clumps’ with infected
erythrocytes.40 Therefore, one explanation of this paradox could be that low levels of platelets may not only
be a marker of parasite burden but may also be protective from severe disease.
Commercial tests for the detection of antimalarial
antibodies using recombinant malarial antigens are under evaluation. The antigens used in these kits are vaccine candidates and are proteins expressed on the surface of the invasive blood stages of the malaria parasites. However, these same proteins are targets of protective immune responses and are therefore antigenically
diverse and elicit highly variable natural antibody responses. It remains to be seen if kits based on antigenically diverse antigens will detect antimalarial antibodies
from prospective blood donors with sufficient sensitivity.
Coagulation
Abnormalities of laboratory tests of hemostasis, suggesting activation of the coagulation cascades, occur in acute
infection, particularly in adults. Patients may present with
bleeding at injection sites or mucous membranes. However, histological evidence of intravascular fibrin deposition is notably absent in those dying from severe malaria.2 However, Factor XIII, normally responsible for
cross-linking fibrin, is inactivated during malaria infection, and these data may explain low levels of fibrin deposition in the face of increased procoagulant activity.41
Diagnosis
In spite of the distinct clinical syndromes of severe disease, malaria is often misdiagnosed outside endemic areas as the initial signs of disease are nonspecific. Examination of traditional Giemsa-stained thick or thin
films will in most cases confirm the diagnosis. The distinctive features of the different types of malaria are
described in standard texts.44 Examination of thick films
for malaria parasites is a skill honed by regular practice
and probably requires specific training for those working in nonendemic areas. Occasionally, severe disease
from malaria can be present without detectable parasites in the peripheral circulation, and empirical therapy
should be commenced if the patient is seriously ill and
there is clinical suspicion of malaria infection.
The traditional methods of diagnosis have been challenged but not superseded by the application of modern
methods. Microscopy with fluorescent stains (QBC),
polymerase chain reaction assays, and some automated
blood cell analyzers offer new approaches, but these are
not in wide use.45 More recently, dipstick tests for the
detection of parasite antigens HRP2 and pLDH have been
developed (Parasight-F [Becton Dickinson, Cockeysville,
MD, USA], ICT [ICT Diagnostics, Sydney, Australia],
and OptiMAL [Flow Inc., Portland, OR, USA]). These
methods may be a useful adjunct in a busy lab, but the
tests lose sensitivity at low parasitemias (< 10,000/µL)
and have not been licensed for use by the Food and Drug
Administration.46
Chronic Malaria Infection and the
Transmission of Malaria by Transfusion
One of the outstanding problems for those managing the
blood supply in nonmalaria endemic countries is the prevention of the transmission of malaria by blood transfusion. In nonimmunes, falciparum malaria would almost
invariably develop within 3 months of return from a
malaria-endemic area. Furthermore, the infection is
symptomatic at very low levels of parasitemia. Nonimmune potential blood donors could be safely excluded
from transmitting P. falciparum if they remain asymptomatic 6 months after return from the tropics, although
the exact time limits for exclusion of donors who have
returned from the tropics are widely debated.
However, malaria is readily transmissible by blood
transfusion from semi-immune donors harboring an
asymptomatic infection several years after return from
a malaria-endemic area.42,43 These donors can in principle be identified by the presence of high titer antibodies against blood-stage antigens.42 Previously, blood donors who were semi-immune to malaria and carrying
asymptomatic infection were identified by an ELISA test
to detect anti-blood-stage malaria antibodies, using an
extract of blood-stage parasites grown in Aotus monkeys. However, the sensitivity of the test, latterly supplied commercially using a stock of antigen derived from
the original preparation, declined until it was insufficiently reliable for use in the National Blood Service in
the UK.
46
Treatment
Malaria requires urgent effective chemotherapy to prevent progression of disease; such chemotherapy may be
the most crucial public health intervention to reduce global mortality from malaria. In severely ill patients, good
nursing care is vital. Monitoring and treatment of fits
and hypoglycemia are essential and antipyretics should
be given.47
American Society of Hematology
Chemotherapy
The drug treatment of malaria must take account of the
expected pattern of drug resistance in the area where
the infection was contracted, the severity of clinical disease, and the species of parasite. The spread of drugresistant parasites and the optimal use of affordable, effective drugs are of continual concern, and these topics
have been reviewed recently.48,49
Transfusion
Blood transfusion is in principle a straightforward solution to the treatment of severe malarial anemia, although
controversy exists over the trigger for transfusion and
the rate of administration of blood. The standard regimes
of cautious and slow delivery of blood have been challenged by the demonstration that rapid initial flow rates
may correct lactic acidosis. However, in nonimmunes
and pregnant women, blood transfusion must be accompanied by careful hemodynamic monitoring to avoid
precipitating or exacerbating pulmonary edema.
No formal controlled trials for the transfusion of patients with malaria have been performed. Whatever clinical guidelines emerge, blood transfusion in the heartland of malaria endemic areas is beset by many practical and theoretical problems, including the absence of
well-characterized donor panels and the residual risk of
HIV transmission in the serological window of infectivity without detectable antibodies (estimated at 1 in 2000).
At a practical level, positive indirect antiglobulin tests
in acute infection may make the exclusion of alloantibodies difficult. Depending on the clinical urgency and
transfusion history, the least serologically incompatible
blood may have to be given.
Exchange transfusion
One therapeutic option available in North America and
in Europe for the urgent treatment of nonimmune patients with severe disease would be exchange blood transfusion. This procedure removes nonsequestered, infected
erythrocytes and possibly circulating ‘toxins.’ In the
absence of evidence from trials for the use of exchange
transfusion in malaria, some have suggested that this
treatment could be given for hyperparasitemia (> 20%)
in severely ill nonimmune patients.8,50
Conclusion
The clinical features of malaria are diverse in severity
and syndrome and include coma, severe anemia, and
respiratory distress. In nonimmunes, severe disease may
include renal and/or respiratory failure. Emerging themes
in clinical management include the management of seizures and of respiratory distress. No reliable nonmicroscopic methods are available for the detection of
Hematology 2002
low parasitemia or of those potential blood donors who
may be harboring asymptomatic infection. The optimal
chemotherapy regimes for endemic areas and for nonimmune patients are under continuous review as drugresistant parasites emerge, but there is no specific adjunctive treatment for established disease. However, our
understanding of both the parasitological and clinical
aspects of pathophysiology is fragmentary, and a detailed
description of the pertinent disease processes may lead
to novel approaches to treat or to prevent malaria.
III. GENETIC VARIABILITY IN HOST RESPONSE
TO MALARIA
David J. Weatherall, MD*
The notion that variations in host response to infection
might have a genetic basis is not new.1 At the 8th International Congress of Genetics in Stockhölm in 1948,
Neel and Valentine, in order to explain the remarkably
high frequencies of thalassemia in some of the immigrant populations in the United States, calculated a mutation rate for the disease of 1:2500. Haldane felt that
this was unlikely and that these remarkable gene frequencies must be the result of heterozygote selection.
“The corpuscules of anaemic heterozygotes are smaller
than normal, and more resistant to hypertonic solutions.
It is at least conceivable that they are also more resistant
to attacks by the sporozoa which cause malaria, a disease prevalent in Italy, Sicily and Greece, where the gene
is frequent.”2 Although it has been suggested that the
concept of genetic resistance to infection was already
established by the late 1940s,3 a recent reassessment
of this question leaves little doubt of the originality
and importance of what became known as the malaria hypothesis.4
Of more than 100 species of malarial parasite (Plasmodium), there are only four that have man as their natural vertebrate host; P. falciparum, P. malariae, P. vivax,
and P. ovale. Because malaria has in the past and con-
* Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of
Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, Oxford, OX3
9DS
Acknowledgments. The author’s work was supported by the
Medical Research Council and The Wellcome Trust. We thank
Liz Rose for typing this manuscript.
This review is based in part on a recent overview of the
genetics of susceptibility to infectious disease: Weatherall DJ,
Clegg JB. Genetic variability in response to infection: malaria
and after. Genes Immun. In press.
47
tinues to be one of the major killers of mankind, information about individual genetic susceptibility is of broad
biological interest. However, with the advent of potential vaccines against malarial infection, and the problems of testing their efficacy in the field, it now becomes
of considerable practical importance to be able to determine the frequency and degree of natural protection.
Over recent years, a considerable amount of progress
has been made toward this end.
Inherited Disorders of Hemoglobin
Collectively, the inherited disorders of hemoglobin are
the most common monogenic diseases in man. They
comprise the structural hemoglobin variants and the
thalassemias, inherited defects in the synthesis of the α
or β chains of human adult hemoglobin. Although hundreds of structural hemoglobin variants have been identified,5 only 3—Hb S, Hb C, and Hb E—reach polymorphic frequencies.6,7 The gene for Hb S is distributed
widely throughout sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East,
and parts of the Indian subcontinent, where carrier frequencies range from 5-40% or more of the population.
Hb C is restricted to parts of West and North Africa. Hb
E is found in the eastern half of the Indian subcontinent
and throughout Southeast Asia, where, in some areas,
carrier rates may exceed 60% of the population. The
thalassemias have a high incidence in a broad band extending from the Mediterranean basin and parts of Africa, throughout the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and into the Pacific Islands.4,7 The carrier frequencies for β thalassemia in these
areas range from 1-20%, though rarely greater, while
those for the milder forms of α thalassemia are much
higher, ranging from 10-20% in parts of sub-Saharan
Africa, through 40% or more in some Middle Eastern and
Indian populations, to as high as 80% in northern Papua
New Guinea and isolated groups in Northeast India.
Analysis of these conditions at the molecular level
has provided invaluable information about their heterogeneity and population genetics. Studies of globin gene
haplotypes—that is, the patterns of restriction fragmentlength polymorphisms in the α or β globin gene clusters
associated with these conditions8-10—has provided important information about their evolution.11 They suggest that the sickle cell mutation may have occurred at
least twice, once in Africa and once in either the Middle
East or India. Similar data have been interpreted as pointing to multiple origins for the Hb S gene in Africa and
the Hb E gene in Asia. This seems unlikely, however,
and a more plausible explanation for much of the haplotype diversity observed in association with these variants is that it reflects redistribution on different backgrounds by gene conversion and recombination.11 Over
48
200 different mutations have been found to underlie β
thalassemia; each high-frequency population has its own
particular mutations.4,12 The genetics of α thalassemia is
more complex, particularly since the α globin genes are
duplicated.4 There are two major forms of α thalassemia:
αo thalassemia, in which both linked α globin genes are
deleted, and α+ thalassemia, in which one of the pairs of
linked genes is deleted. The homozygous states for these
conditions are represented as --/-- and -α/-α. Both these
conditions are extremely heterogeneous at the molecular level, and many different size deletions have been
found to cause both α+ and αo thalassemia. As in the
case of β thalassemia, the high-frequency regions for a
thalassemia have different sets of mutations.4,12
The Structural Hemoglobin Variants and Malaria
The extensive evidence which indicated that the sickle
cell trait offers protection against P. falciparum malaria
has been reviewed previously.11,13 More recent studies
in West Africa suggest that the greatest impact of Hb S
seems to be to protect against either death or severe disease—that is, profound anemia or cerebral malaria—
while having less effect on infection per se.14 The mechanism for its protective effects has also been reviewed
recently and probably reflects both impaired entry into,
and growth of parasites in, red cells.1,4 Recent studies in
West Africa suggest that the relatively high frequencies
of Hb C have also been maintained by resistance to P.
falciparum malaria.15 In this case, there is evidence for
both heterozygote and homozygote resistance, and the
authors suggest that, unlike the sickle cell mutation, this
may be an example of transient polymorphism, based
largely on the perceived lack of clinical disability or
hematological changes of Hb C homozygotes. However,
if this were the case, it would be difficult to understand
why the frequency of Hb C is not higher in African populations. Since it is not absolutely clear whether homozygotes for this variant are completely unaffected by the
condition, further work will be required to substantiate
this interesting suggestion. To date, there is no formal
evidence for the protective effect of Hb E against malaria, although its population distribution and phenotypic
properties of a mild form of β thalassemia suggest that
this is very likely to be the case.4
Thalassemia and Malaria
Curiously, it has taken much longer to provide any solid
backing for Haldane’s original hypothesis that thalassemia carriers are protected against malaria. This long
and frustrating story has been reviewed recently.4 While
early studies in Sardinia suggested that there was a relationship between the distribution of thalassemia and
malaria in the past, this correlation was not observed in
American Society of Hematology
other populations. Furthermore, until the molecular era,
it was almost impossible to distinguish between selection, drift, and migration of founder effects as the basis
for the population distribution of the thalassemias. However, once it became apparent that each high-frequency
area has its own particular thalassemia mutations, it
seemed more likely that they had arisen independently
and then expanded due to local selective pressures. More
recent studies have provided strong evidence that this is
the case, at least for the α thalassemias.
The frequency of α+ thalassemia in the Southwest
Pacific follows a clinal distribution from northwest to
southeast, with the highest frequencies on the north coast
of New Guinea and the lowest in New Caledonia.16 These
frequencies show a strong correlation with malaria endemicity, as recorded in pre-eradication surveys. On the
other hand, there is no geographical correlation of malarial endemicity with other polymorphic markers in this
region. The possibility that α thalassemia had been introduced from the mainland populations of Southeast
Asia, and that its frequency had been diluted as they
moved south across the island populations, was excluded
when it was found that the molecular forms of α thalassemia in Melanesia and Papua New Guinea are different to those of the mainland and are set in different α
globin gene haplotypes.16 Although these findings provided strong circumstantial evidence that the high frequency of α thalassemia in the Southwest Pacific is the
result of malarial selection, it was also found that the
disease occurs with gene frequencies varying from 1%
to 15% elsewhere in this region, from Fiji in the west to
Tahiti and beyond in the east, and in the Micronesian
atolls. This was worrying because malaria has never been
recorded in these island populations. However, further
studies showed that in Polynesia almost 100% of α+
thalassemia can be accounted for by a single mutation
that had been previously defined in Vanuatu. Furthermore, this mutation was on the common Vanuatuan α
globin gene haplotype. These observations provided
strong evidence that the occurrence of the α thalassemia
gene in these nonmalarious areas was the result of population migration.17
These population studies suggesting a protective
effect of α thalassemia against P. falciparum malaria have
been augmented more recently by a prospective casecontrol study of nearly 250 children with severe malaria
admitted to Madang Hospital on the north coast of Papua
New Guinea, a region where there is a very high rate of
malaria transmission. Compared with normal children,
the risk of contracting severe malaria, as defined by the
strictest World Health Organization guidelines, was 0.4
for α+ thalassemia homozygotes, and 0.66 for α+ heterozygotes. These studies provide direct evidence for a
Hematology 2002
very strong protective effect of α+ thalassemia against
malaria, in both the heterozygous and the homozygous
state.18
Molecular analyses of the β globin genes in thalassemic and nonthalassemic individuals in different populations have provided some, albeit indirect, evidence that
β thalassemia has also arisen from selection.4 As already
mentioned, every population has a different set of β
thalassemia mutations. The β globin gene haplotype distribution is divided into 2 regions, the 3′ and 5′
subhaplotypes, which are separated by a recombination
hotspot.8,19 However, it turns out that particular β thalassemia mutations are closely associated with specific β
globin gene haplotypes, most strongly with the 3′
subhaplotype, which contains the β globin gene, but also
with substantial linkage to the 5′ subhaplotype, despite
the fact that the haplotypes are separated by the
hotspot.9,11 These observations suggest that a recent cause
is responsible for the expansion of the β thalassemia
mutations; migration has not had sufficient time to disperse them, unlike the normal β globin gene background
haplotypes, nor has recombination yet disrupted these
linkages.4,11,20 An excellent example of this relationship
is seen in Vanuatu, where the sequences of a 3-kilobase
(3-kb) region around the β gene from 60 normal chromosomes showed 17 different alleles, involving 19 polymorphic sites. In contrast, 12 β thalassemia chromosomes
carrying the common mutation in that region were totally monomorphic over the same region.21 It seems clear,
therefore, that the β thalassemia genes throughout malarial regions of the world have been amplified to a high
frequency so recently that none of the other forces—
migration, recombination, drift, and so on—have had
sufficient time or opportunity to bring them into genetic
equilibrium with their haplotype backgrounds.
But although these recent studies have provided very
strong evidence that the thalassemias have reached their
current frequencies by heterozygote selection against
malaria, less progress has been made toward an understanding of the likely mechanisms involved. The extensive literature reporting in vitro studies of invasion and
development of P. falciparum in thalassemic red cells
has been reviewed recently.4 In short, although some
abnormalities have been found in the more complex
hemoglobinopathies, in the milder forms—that is, those
that would have had to come under selection to maintain high gene frequencies—no abnormalities of invasion or growth have been reported. Although several attempts have been made to monitor parasite growth over
a number of cycles, these studies have given inconsistent results. More consistent findings have been obtained
in analyses of the binding of malaria hyperimmune serum to the surface of P. falciparum–infected thalassemic
49
red cells, in which it has been found consistently that
infected cells bind significantly more antibody per unit
area than control cells.22 While there is good evidence
that the rate of decline of Hb F production in heterozygous β thalassemic infants is retarded,4 and some limited evidence from short-term culture experiments that
Hb F retards the growth and development of malarial
parasites in vitro,23 this form of protection would be applicable to only β thalassemia.
A completely different mechanism for the possible
protection against malaria afforded by α thalassemia was
suggested by studies of a large cohort of children, with
and without thalassemia, on an island with holoendemic
malaria in Vanuatu. It was found that the incidence of
uncomplicated malaria and the prevalence of splenomegaly, an index of malaria infection, were significantly
higher in very young children with α thalassemia than
in normal children. Moreover, the effect was most
marked in the youngest children and with the nonlethal
parasite, P. vivax.24 It was suggested that the early susceptibility to P. vivax, which may reflect the more rapid
turnover of red cells in α thalassemic infants,25 may be
acting as a natural vaccine by inducing cross-species
protection against P. falciparum.
There are other hints that protection by thalassemia
may have at least some degree of immunological involvement. As mentioned earlier, the surface antigen expression in P. falciparum–infected α thalassemic red cells is
almost twice that of normal cells, a phenomenon that
may lead to better presentation of parasite antigens to
the immune system. Furthermore, rosette formation,
which has been associated with cerebral malaria, appears
to be reduced in thalassemic red cells.26 But perhaps the
most important piece of indirect evidence comes from
the case control study described earlier, which revealed
that α thalassemia not only protects against severe malaria but almost equally against hospitalization from other
infectious diseases.18
In short, although there are now extensive data in
support of Haldane’s hypothesis that the high frequencies of thalassemia have been maintained by heterozygote, or, as it now appears, for some forms of mild homozygote advantage against malaria, the mechanisms involved are far more complex than those that he proposed.
It is now clear that it is not simply the properties of the
smaller, under-hemoglobinized red cells that are responsible for the protective effect. Rather, it appears to reflect a much more complex series of events, at least some
of which may turn out to have an immunological basis.
50
Other Red Cell Polymorphisms and
Protection Against Malaria
It has been believed for a long time that the high prevalence of individuals in Africa who do not carry the Duffy
blood group antigen reflects the protective effect of this
genotype against infection with P. vivax. This variant
disrupts the Duffy antigen/chemokine receptor (DARC)
promoter and alters a GATA-1 binding site, which inhibits DARC expression on red cells and therefore prevents DARC-mediated entry of P. vivax.27,28 This is a
milder form of malaria, at least at the present time, and
unless it was more severe in the past there may be another explanation for the high prevalence of those who
do not carry the Duffy antigen in African populations.
A variety of other milder associations between blood
group antigens and susceptibility to malaria have been
reported.29
There is very strong evidence that glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, an X-linked
disorder that affects millions of individuals in tropical
countries, is also protective against P. falciparum malaria. As with thalassemias, several hundred different
mutations are responsible for this condition, and their
pattern varies between different populations.30 Both
hemizygous males and heterozygous females have been
found to be protected against severe malaria in both East
and West Africa,31 and distribution studies, in Vanuatu,
for example,32 have shown a strong correlation with
malaria. As is the case for the thalassemias, the mechanisms of protection are still not clear. Work in this field
has been reviewed recently; the most likely protective
mechanisms appear to be impaired parasite growth or
more efficient phagocytosis of parasitized red cells at
an early stage of maturation.1
Another remarkable example of a malaria-related
balanced polymorphism involves the mutation in band 3
of the red cell membrane that causes the Melanesian form
of ovalocytosis, a condition that is extremely common
throughout Melanesia and that appears to be lethal in
homozygotes.33 This is a particularly interesting polymorphism because heterozygotes appear to be fully susceptible to malarial infection and yet are offered almost
complete protection against the development of cerebral
malaria.34,35 This observation suggests that the defect in
the red cell membrane also alters the interactions between
the parasitized cell and the vascular endothelium. The nature of this interaction remains to be characterized.
Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) Genes
The human major histocompatibility complex is the most
polymorphic region of the human genome that has been
analyzed in detail to date. There is increasing evidence
that selective pressure by infectious diseases has conAmerican Society of Hematology
tributed to this remarkable degree of variability. Structural analyses have suggested that these polymorphisms
predominantly affect sites that are critical for peptide
epitope binding.1
In the case of malaria, there is strong evidence for
associations between both HLA Class I and II alleles
and susceptibility to P. falciparum malaria. Thus, at least
in parts of Africa, the Class I B53 allele and the Class II
DRB1*1352 provide considerable resistance against the
severe manifestations of malaria—that is, profound anemia and cerebral malaria.14 Further studies have identified a peptide from the parasite liver-stage antigen-1
(LAS-1) that is an epitope for specific CD8+ cytotoxic T
lymphocytes (CTL) that lyse target cells expressing this
antigen.36 These observations suggest that parasite-specific CTL are present after natural infection and that this
may be at least one mechanism for the HLA-B53 association. So far, data of this type are lacking for other
populations.
Other Polymorphisms
After the early successes in identifying polymorphic
systems that modify host responses to malaria, a number of other unrelated polygenes that have a similar effect were found. TNF-α, a cytokine that is secreted by
white blood cells and has widespread effects on immune
activation, has been analyzed in a number of studies.
Several different polymorphisms in the promoter regions
of the gene for TNF-α have been identified and have
been associated with particularly severe forms of malaria.37 One of these, TNF-α-308, may cause increased
expression of TNF-α.38 Another influences transcriptionfactor binding and is associated with an increased risk
of cerebral malaria.39
Another particularly fruitful area of recent research
in this field is the investigation of polymorphisms of molecules involved in the adhesion of parasitized red cells
to the vascular endothelium. The observation that CD36,
an important molecule of this kind, is common in Africa
led to investigations into its role in malaria. CD36 deficiency has been associated with both susceptibility and
resistance to severe forms of malaria.40,41
Recently, a variant of the intracellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM1), ICAMKilifi, has been found more commonly in Kenyan children with severe malaria, although
it is not associated with more severe disease in West Africans.42,43 Thus, although these relationships need a great
deal more work, it seems likely that genetic variation of
both effectors of the immune system and adhesion molecules may play an important role in variable response
to P. falciparum malaria.
Further evidence that there may be hitherto unidentified immune mechanisms responsible for variations in
Hematology 2002
individual response to P. falciparum malaria has come
from extensive population studies in West Africa. Analyses of sympatric ethnic groups with very similar exposures to malaria have shown remarkable differences in
infection rates, malaria morbidity, and the prevalence
and levels of antibodies to a variety of P. falciparum
antigens.44 Extensive investigation of these populations
showed no differences in the use of malaria-protective
measures or any other sociocultural or environmental
factors that might have modified these responses.
Murine Models of Malaria
The growing evidence that at least part of the genetically determined variation in response to severe malaria
in humans has an immune basis suggests that more loci
that mediate responses of this kind remain to be discovered. So far, total-genome searches for putative loci of
this kind have not been reported in the case of human
malaria. However, there is growing evidence that analyses of murine malaria using this approach may be of
considerable value for further clarifying the genes involved in humans.
Among the murine malaria models, P. chabaudi offers a valuable experimental model of the human form
of malaria. Affected animals have analogous blood-stage
antigens, the organism invades reticulocytes and mature
erythrocytes, infection is associated with suppression of
B- and T-cell responses, and the parasite is sequested in
the liver and spleen. Recently, there has been considerable success in starting to identify some of the loci involved in variable susceptibility to the consequences of
P. chabaudi-induced malaria in different strains of mice.
These studies have involved the identification of resistant strains by cross-breeding and then using total genome searches to identify the loci involved in reduced
susceptibility.45-47
Using this approach, a number of chromosomal regions in the mouse genome have been pinpointed as
likely to contain a resistance loci for murine malaria.
For example, the identification of the Char4 region on
mouse chromosome 3, which contains a number of possible candidate genes for malaria resistance, can now be
used to search for possible associations of the corresponding human syntenic chromosomal region with susceptibility and/or severity of disease in endemic areas
of malaria.47 This new approach of combining murine
and human genetics offers an extremely promising way
of further exploring genetic variability in response to
malarial infections.
There has also been considerable interest in utilizing transgenic mice containing different human globin
genes as models for exploring the mechanisms of varying susceptibility to malaria in carriers for particular he51
moglobin disorders. So far, although some of these models have reproduced findings which have been observed
in human beings, they have failed to point to any of the
mechanisms involved in protection against P. falciparum
infection by different hemoglobin variants. This field has
been reviewed recently.48
Evolutionary Implications
As we have seen, a recurrent pattern is emerging for the
distribution and molecular pathology of the human malaria-related polymorphisms. Despite the remarkable
degree of protection offered against heterozygotes by
the sickle cell gene, and its frequent appearance in Africa, the Middle East, and India, it has never been found
farther east than India. Similarly, although Hb E reaches
extremely high frequencies throughout Southeast Asia,
it is not seen farther west than the eastern parts of the
Indian subcontinent. Recent studies of the β globin gene
haplotypes associated with the βS Senegal mutation have
suggested that it is recent (45-70 generations) in origin.49
Both the α and β thalassemias occur throughout the tropical climes, with the exception of Central and South
America, but in each of the high-frequency populations
there are different sets of mutations; their relationships
to haplotypes of the β globin gene suggest that the expansion of the β thalassemia mutations must have occurred fairly recently. Indeed, all these observations are
in keeping with the notion that whatever has been responsible for achieving the extraordinarily high gene
frequencies for these conditions has been of fairly recent origin.
Recent studies of haplotype diversity and linkage
disequilibrium at the human G6PD locus provide further evidence of the recent origin of alleles that confer
malarial resistance.50 In an analysis of 2 G6PD haplotypes, it was found that 2 common variants appeared to
have evolved independently between 3000 and 11,000
years ago. These observations on the fairly recent, in
evolutionary terms, appearance of genetic polymorphisms that confer resistance to malaria are in keeping
with estimates of the spread of P. falciparum derived
from studies of polymorphic systems of the parasite. For
example, a recent analysis of 25 intron sequences of P.
falciparum, involving both general metabolic and housekeeping genes, showed very few nucleotide polymorphisms and suggested that the parasite originated in
something like its present form between 9000 and 20,000
years ago.51 These figures are in general agreement with
other studies of polymorphic genes of P. falciparum.52
This timescale is in keeping with the notion that it was
the development of agriculture somewhere between 5000
and 10,000 years ago that provided the conditions necessary for the effective spread of malaria.
52
Summary
The picture that is emerging, therefore, is that during
the relatively short exposure to severe forms of malaria
by human populations, a wide range of different genetic
polymorphisms have been utilized to modify individual
response to this lethal disease. This has had a profound
effect on the genetic constitution of these populations.
Not only, as evidenced by the hemoglobin disorders and
G6PD, has it left in its wake some extremely common
monogenic diseases, but it may well have changed the
capacity of these populations to respond to other infections. Clearly, we have identified only the tip of the iceberg of the remarkable genetic variation that exposure
to malaria has left in its wake.
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