Borneo Medical and Health Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, 88400 Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia.
Department of Pathobiology and Medical Diagnostics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, 88400, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia.
J Physiol Anthropol. 2021 Jan 7;40(1):1. doi: 10.1186/s40101-020-00251-9.
Malaria is one of the most devastating infectious diseases of humans. It is problematic clinically and economically as it prevails in poorer countries and regions, strongly hindering socioeconomic development. The causative agents of malaria are unicellular protozoan parasites belonging to the genus Plasmodium. These parasites infect not only humans but also other vertebrates, from reptiles and birds to mammals. To date, over 200 species of Plasmodium have been formally described, and each species infects a certain range of hosts. Plasmodium species that naturally infect humans and cause malaria in large areas of the world are limited to five-P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae, P. ovale and P. knowlesi. The first four are specific for humans, while P. knowlesi is naturally maintained in macaque monkeys and causes zoonotic malaria widely in South East Asia. Transmission of Plasmodium species between vertebrate hosts depends on an insect vector, which is usually the mosquito. The vector is not just a carrier but the definitive host, where sexual reproduction of Plasmodium species occurs, and the parasite's development in the insect is essential for transmission to the next vertebrate host. The range of insect species that can support the critical development of Plasmodium depends on the individual parasite species, but all five Plasmodium species causing malaria in humans are transmitted exclusively by anopheline mosquitoes. Plasmodium species have remarkable genetic flexibility which lets them adapt to alterations in the environment, giving them the potential to quickly develop resistance to therapeutics such as antimalarials and to change host specificity. In this article, selected topics involving the Plasmodium species that cause malaria in humans are reviewed.
疟疾是人类最具破坏性的传染病之一。它在经济和临床方面都存在问题,因为它在贫穷国家和地区流行,严重阻碍了社会经济发展。疟疾的病原体是属于疟原虫属的单细胞原生动物寄生虫。这些寄生虫不仅感染人类,还感染从爬行动物和鸟类到哺乳动物等其他脊椎动物。迄今为止,已正式描述了超过 200 种疟原虫,每种疟原虫都感染一定范围的宿主。自然感染人类并在世界大片地区引起疟疾的疟原虫物种仅限于五种——恶性疟原虫、间日疟原虫、三日疟原虫、卵形疟原虫和诺氏疟原虫。前四种是人类特有的,而诺氏疟原虫则自然存在于猕猴中,并在东南亚广泛引起动物源性疟疾。疟原虫种在脊椎动物宿主之间的传播取决于昆虫媒介,通常是蚊子。媒介不仅是载体,还是终宿主,疟原虫种的有性繁殖发生在终宿主体内,寄生虫在昆虫体内的发育对于传播到下一个脊椎动物宿主至关重要。能够支持疟原虫关键发育的昆虫种类范围取决于个别寄生虫种类,但导致人类疟疾的五种疟原虫均仅由按蚊传播。疟原虫种具有显著的遗传灵活性,可以使它们适应环境的变化,使它们有可能迅速对治疗药物(如抗疟药)产生抗药性,并改变宿主特异性。在本文中,回顾了涉及导致人类疟疾的疟原虫种的一些选定主题。