Natural malaria infection in Anopheles gambiae is regulated by a single genomic control region |
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Authors: | Riehle Michelle M Markianos Kyriacos Niaré Oumou Xu Jiannong Li Jun Touré Abdoulaye M Podiougou Belco Oduol Frederick Diawara Sory Diallo Mouctar Coulibaly Boubacar Ouatara Ahmed Kruglyak Leonid Traoré Sékou F Vernick Kenneth D |
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Affiliation: | Center for Microbial and Plant Genomics and Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA. |
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Abstract: | We surveyed an Anopheles gambiae population in a West African malaria transmission zone for naturally occurring genetic loci that control mosquito infection with the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. The strongest Plasmodium resistance loci cluster in a small region of chromosome 2L and each locus explains at least 89% of parasite-free mosquitoes in independent pedigrees. Together, the clustered loci form a genomic Plasmodium-resistance island that explains most of the genetic variation for malaria parasite infection of mosquitoes in nature. Among the candidate genes in this chromosome region, RNA interference knockdown assays confirm a role in Plasmodium resistance for Anopheles Plasmodium-responsive leucine-rich repeat 1 (APL1), encoding a leucine-rich repeat protein that is similar to molecules involved in natural pathogen resistance mechanisms in plants and mammals. |
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