Guindo Aldiouma, Fairhurst Rick M, Doumbo Ogobara K, Wellems Thomas E, Diallo Dapa A
Malaria Research and Training Center, Faculty of Medicine, Pharmacy, and Odontostomatology, University of Bamako, Mali.
PLoS Med. 2007 Mar;4(3):e66. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0040066.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) is important in the control of oxidant stress in erythrocytes, the host cells for Plasmodium falciparum. Mutations in this enzyme produce X-linked deficiency states associated with protection against malaria, notably in Africa where the A- form of G6PD deficiency is widespread. Some reports have proposed that heterozygous females with mosaic populations of normal and deficient erythrocytes (due to random X chromosome inactivation) have malaria resistance similar to or greater than hemizygous males with populations of uniformly deficient erythrocytes. These proposals are paradoxical, and they are not consistent with currently hypothesized mechanisms of protection.
We conducted large case-control studies of the A- form of G6PD deficiency in cases of severe or uncomplicated malaria among two ethnic populations of rural Mali, West Africa, where malaria is hyperendemic. Our results indicate that the uniform state of G6PD deficiency in hemizygous male children conferred significant protection against severe, life-threatening malaria, and that it may have likewise protected homozygous female children. No such protection was evident from the mosaic state of G6PD deficiency in heterozygous females. We also found no significant differences in the parasite densities of males and females with differences in G6PD status. Pooled odds ratios from meta-analysis of our data and data from a previous study confirmed highly significant protection against severe malaria in hemizygous males but not in heterozygous females. Among the different forms of severe malaria, protection was principally evident against cerebral malaria, the most frequent form of life-threatening malaria in these studies.
The A- form of G6PD deficiency in Africa is under strong natural selection from the preferential protection it provides to hemizygous males against life-threatening malaria. Little or no such protection is present among heterozygous females. Although these conclusions are consistent with data from at least one previous study, they have not heretofore been realized to our knowledge, and they therefore give fresh perspectives on malaria protection by G6PD deficiency as an X-linked trait.
葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶(G6PD)在控制红细胞中的氧化应激方面起着重要作用,而红细胞是恶性疟原虫的宿主细胞。该酶的突变会产生与疟疾抵抗力相关的X连锁缺陷状态,尤其是在非洲,G6PD缺乏的A-型很普遍。一些报告提出,具有正常和缺陷红细胞镶嵌群体的杂合子女性(由于随机X染色体失活)具有与红细胞均一缺陷的半合子男性相似或更强的疟疾抵抗力。这些观点自相矛盾,且与目前假设的保护机制不一致。
我们在西非马里农村的两个民族中,针对严重或非复杂性疟疾患者开展了关于G6PD缺乏A-型的大型病例对照研究,当地疟疾高度流行。我们的结果表明,半合子男性儿童中G6PD缺乏的均一状态对严重的、危及生命的疟疾具有显著的保护作用,对纯合子女性儿童可能同样具有保护作用。杂合子女性中G6PD缺乏的镶嵌状态则未显示出此类保护作用。我们还发现,G6PD状态不同的男性和女性在寄生虫密度上没有显著差异。对我们的数据和先前一项研究的数据进行荟萃分析得出的合并比值比证实,半合子男性对严重疟疾具有高度显著的保护作用,而杂合子女性则不然。在不同形式的严重疟疾中,主要是对脑型疟疾有保护作用,脑型疟疾是这些研究中最常见的危及生命的疟疾形式。
非洲G6PD缺乏的A-型受到强烈的自然选择,因为它为半合子男性提供了针对危及生命的疟疾的优先保护。杂合子女性中几乎没有这种保护作用。尽管这些结论与至少一项先前研究的数据一致,但据我们所知,此前尚未被认识到,因此它们为G6PD缺乏作为一种X连锁性状对疟疾的保护作用提供了新的视角。