Modiano D, Petrarca V, Sirima B S, Nebié I, Diallo D, Esposito F, Coluzzi M
Istituto di Parassitologia, World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Malaria Epidemiology, Università di Roma La Sapienza, Italy.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 Nov 12;93(23):13206-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.93.23.13206.
The comparison of malaria indicators among populations that have different genetic backgrounds and are uniformly exposed to the same parasite strains is one approach to the study of human heterogeneties in the response to the infection. We report the results of comparative surveys on three sympatric West African ethnic groups, Fulani, Mossi, and Rimaibé, living in the same conditions of hyperendemic transmission in a Sudan savanna area northeast of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. The Mossi and Rimaibé are Sudanese negroid populations with a long tradition of sedentary farming, while the Fulani are nomadic pastoralists, partly settled and characterized by non-negroid features of possible caucasoid origin. Parasitological, clinical, and immunological investigations showed consistent interethnic differences in Plasmodium falciparum infection rates, malaria morbidity, and prevalence and levels of antibodies to various P. falciparum antigens. The data point to a remarkably similar response to malaria in the Mossi and Rimaibé, while the Fulani are clearly less parasitized, less affected by the disease, and more responsive to all antigens tested. No difference in the use of malaria protective measures was demonstrated that could account for these findings, and sociocultural or environmental factors do not seem to be involved. Known genetic factors of resistance to malaria did not show higher frequencies in the Fulani. The differences in the immune response were not explained by the entomological observations, which indicated substantially uniform exposure to infective bites. The available data support the existence of unknown genetic factors, possibly related to humoral immune responses, determining interethnic differences in the susceptibility to malaria.
在具有不同遗传背景且均暴露于相同寄生虫菌株的人群中比较疟疾指标,是研究人类对感染反应异质性的一种方法。我们报告了对居住在布基纳法索瓦加杜古东北部苏丹稀树草原地区、处于高度流行传播相同条件下的三个同域西非族群——富拉尼族、莫西族和里马贝族——进行的比较调查结果。莫西族和里马贝族是苏丹尼格罗人群体,有着长期的定居农耕传统,而富拉尼族是游牧牧民,部分已定居,具有可能源于高加索人种的非尼格罗特征。寄生虫学、临床和免疫学调查显示,在恶性疟原虫感染率、疟疾发病率以及针对各种恶性疟原虫抗原的抗体流行率和水平方面,族裔间存在一致差异。数据表明,莫西族和里马贝族对疟疾的反应非常相似,而富拉尼族明显感染寄生虫的情况较少,受疾病影响较小,且对所有测试抗原的反应更强。未发现疟疾防护措施使用方面的差异可以解释这些发现,而且社会文化或环境因素似乎也未涉及。已知的疟疾抗性遗传因素在富拉尼族中并未表现出更高的频率。免疫反应的差异无法用昆虫学观察结果来解释,昆虫学观察表明感染性叮咬的暴露情况基本一致。现有数据支持存在未知的遗传因素,可能与体液免疫反应有关,这些因素决定了族裔间对疟疾易感性的差异。