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malaria background

August 8, 2012 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION

where did malaria come from?

ANSWER

Malaria is a disease caused by a single-celled parasite called Plasmodium. There are many species of Plasmodium, which infect many other animals as well as humans. The types of malaria which infect humans probably evolved from similar Plasmodium species in monkeys and apes; for example, P. vivax is closely related to several species of malaria that infect macaque monkeys in south-east Asia, while P. falciparum, the most severe and deadly kind of malaria, probably evolved from similar infections in chimpanzees and gorillas in central Africa. This transition from other primates to humans occurred many thousands of years ago; further back in time, the types of Plasmodium which infect mammals (rodents can also be infected with Plasmodium) are thought to have jumped over from Plasmodium species which infect birds and reptiles. Even before that, Plasmodium itself seems to have evolved from other types of blood-borne parasites which infect birds and reptiles.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: chimpanzees, cross-over, Evolution, gorillas, human malaria, Macaques, origin of malaria, Plasmodium Falciparum, Plasmodium Vivax

New Malaria Parasites

July 24, 2012 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION

I heard researchers have found a new malaria parasite—what is the name?

ANSWER

New malaria parasites are found quite regularly—the parasite that causes malaria, Plasmodium, actually infects birds, reptiles, rodents and non-human primates like monkeys and apes as well as humans. As such, non-human forms of malaria are discovered relatively frequently in other species. For example, a few years ago, some researchers looked at malaria in apes in Central Africa, and found a new species in gorillas, which is so new it has not even been fully described to science yet, and so remains unnamed! It is thought to be very closely related to Plasmodium falciparum, which is the most dangerous type of malaria in humans. Also recently, two new species were observed in chimpanzees, also in Central Africa, and names P. billcollinsi and P. billbrayi.

Even in humans, new infections are sometimes observed. One which has gained a lot of recent attention is not a new species, but what seems to be increasing numbers of cases of a monkey type of malaria (called P. knowlesi) in humans. It is unclear whether this is due to changes within the parasite, or changes to the landscape which might be creating more favorable conditions for the transmission of this malaria to humans. It is even possible that this malaria has always infected humans, and so this is not a new development, but due to diagnostic issues, it was mistaken for other, human malaria species, such as P. vivax and/or P. malariae.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: apes, birds, chimpanzees, diagnosis, gorillas, Monkeys, Plasmodium billbrayi, Plasmodium billcollinsi, Plasmodium Knowlesi, Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium Vivax, reptiles, research, rodents

Evolution of Malaria

March 2, 2012 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION

how did malaria evolve?

ANSWER

Malaria in humans probably evolved independently several times, and both times likely due to a cross-over event from a closely related primate malaria. For example, Plasmodium vivax is evolutionarily closely related to several species of malaria found in macaque monkeys in south-east Asia, and so a cross-over of one of those species into human, with subsequent adaptation and speciation, is one hypothesis as to the origin of P. vivax. Conversely, some people argue that P. vivax emerged in Africa, due to the high prevalence of certain genetic traits in African populations (such as the Duffy negative antigen), which protect against P. vivax.

In contrast, P. falciparum is agreed to have emerged in sub-Saharan Africa, and likely in the Congo basin, though the exact source of its origin has been under recent scientific dispute. Until 2010, it was thought that P. falciparum had crossed over to humans from chimpanzees, as chimps are known to be infected with P. reichenowi, a species very closely related to P. falciparum. However, a paper was published in 2010 which had sampled Plasmodium parasites of gorillas and revealed new species of Plasmodium which are even more closely related to P. falciparum, suggesting that the cross-over occurred from gorillas to humans.

As you can see, humans are not the only primates to get malaria; many species of monkey and ape are also susceptible to Plasmodium species, and even lemurs have their own suite of Plasmodium parasites. Among the mammals, rodents also can get malaria, and bats are infected with Hepatocystis, a malaria-like parasite which also infects hippos, primates and rodents. However, no other species of mammal appears to be susceptible to Plasmodium/Hepatocystis, and the reasons for this are not entirely clear.

Plasmodium probably crossed over to mammals from birds or lizards, both of which are infected with a vast number of species of Plasmodium. It is unclear in which of these groups Plasmodium first emerged, though it likely evolved originally from another type of blood-borne parasite called Leucocytozoon, which infects birds and uses blackflies (genus Simulium) as vectors.

A sister group to Plasmodium, called Haemoproteus, also evolved from Leucocytozoon but utilises a variety of different vectors, including mosquitoes, biting midges (Culicoides), louse flies (Hippoboscidae) and tabanids (Tabanidae). Plasmodium, by contrast, exclusively uses mosquitoes as its vectors (apart from one species of lizard Plasmodium, P. mexicanum, which uses sandflies), but while mammalian Plasmodium is only transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes, bird and lizard Plasmodium can be transmitted by Culex, Aedes, Culiseta, Anopheles, Mansonia and Psorophora. As such, understanding the patterns of vector and host switches within Plasmodium and related taxa can actually provide interesting insights into the genus’ evolutionary history.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: Aedes, Anopheles, bats, birds, biting midges (Culicoides), chimpanzees, Culex, Culiseta, gorillas, Haemoproteus, Hepatocystis, hippos, Leucocytozoon, lizards, louse flies (Hippoboscidae), macaque, Malaria evolution, Mansonia, mosquitoes, non-human primates, Plasmodium, Plasmodium Falciparum, Plasmodium reichenowi, Plasmodium Vivax, Psorophora, rodents, Simulium, tabanids (Tabanidae)

Where did malaria start in Africa?

February 6, 2012 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION

Where did malaria start in Africa?

ANSWER

Malaria has been present in Africa for tens of thousands of years; given this ancient history, it is very difficult to know exactly where it first entered the continent. Also, there are several different types of malaria in Africa, which have likely had different histories, and malaria researchers continually unearth new evidence regarding the origins of these different species.

For example, it has long been thought that Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly form of malaria, emerged somewhere in the western Congo Basin in Central Africa. Originally, it was thought to have crossed over into humans from a closely related species found in chimpanzees, but recent research, published only in 2010, has suggested that a new species, found in gorillas, is actually the closer relative.

Plasmodium vivax, the most geographically widespread species of malaria that infects humans, has less clear origins. Many of its closely related species occur in south-east Asia, which leads some researchers to suggest this is where it emerged, passing into Africa as humans and their livestock moved across Asia towards the Middle East and North Africa, or possibly via  migration through Madagascar. However, other researchers argue that the high prevalence of certain genetic mutations which protect against Plasmodium vivax malaria found in populations in Africa and of African descent, and particularly West Africa, is evidence that P. vivax actually originated on this continent.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: Africa, biogeography of malaria, chimpanzees, distribution of malaria, Duffy antigen, gorillas, History of malaria, Plasmodium Falciparum, Plasmodium Vivax

How many types of malaria are there?

January 9, 2012 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION

How many types of malaria are there?

ANSWER

There are four species of malaria parasite that commonly infect humans. These are: Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. In addition, a fifth species, P. knowlesi, is starting to draw public health attention as an infection in humans in south-east Asia, and particularly Borneo – previously, it was thought to only infect macaque monkeys.

Apart from these five species, there are many other species of Plasmodium, which infect other primates (including gorillas, chimpanzees and orangutans), rodents, birds and reptiles. A closely related group of parasites, called Hepatocystis, infects monkeys, squirrels, hippopotamus and bats.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: chimpanzees, gorillas, Hepatocystis, Macaques, Plasmodium, Plasmodium Falciparum, Plasmodium Knowlesi, Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium Ovale, Plasmodium Vivax

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