Red blood cell tension protects against severe malaria in the Dantu blood group

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作者
Silvia N. Kariuki
Alejandro Marin-Menendez
Viola Introini
Benjamin J. Ravenhill
Yen-Chun Lin
Alex Macharia
Johnstone Makale
Metrine Tendwa
Wilfred Nyamu
Jurij Kotar
Manuela Carrasquilla
J. Alexandra Rowe
Kirk Rockett
Dominic Kwiatkowski
Michael P. Weekes
Pietro Cicuta
Thomas N. Williams
Julian C. Rayner
机构
[1] KEMRI–Wellcome Trust Research Programme,Department of Epidemiology and Demography
[2] Wellcome Genome Campus,Wellcome Sanger Institute
[3] University of Cambridge,Cavendish Laboratory
[4] University of Cambridge,Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, School of Clinical Medicine
[5] University of Edinburgh,Institute for Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences
[6] University of Oxford,Wellcome Centre for Human Genetics
[7] University of Oxford,Big Data Institute
[8] Imperial College London,Institute of Global Health Innovation
[9] Imperial College London,Department of Infectious Disease
来源
Nature | 2020年 / 585卷
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摘要
Malaria has had a major effect on the human genome, with many protective polymorphisms—such as the sickle-cell trait—having been selected to high frequencies in malaria-endemic regions1,2. The blood group variant Dantu provides 74% protection against all forms of severe malaria in homozygous individuals3–5, a similar degree of protection to that afforded by the sickle-cell trait and considerably greater than that offered by the best malaria vaccine. Until now, however, the protective mechanism has been unknown. Here we demonstrate the effect of Dantu on the ability of the merozoite form of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum to invade red blood cells (RBCs). We find that Dantu is associated with extensive changes to the repertoire of proteins found on the RBC surface, but, unexpectedly, inhibition of invasion does not correlate with specific RBC–parasite receptor–ligand interactions. By following invasion using video microscopy, we find a strong link between RBC tension and merozoite invasion, and identify a tension threshold above which invasion rarely occurs, even in non-Dantu RBCs. Dantu RBCs have higher average tension than non-Dantu RBCs, meaning that a greater proportion resist invasion. These findings provide both an explanation for the protective effect of Dantu, and fresh insight into why the efficiency of P. falciparum invasion might vary across the heterogenous populations of RBCs found both within and between individuals.
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页码:579 / 583
页数:4
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