Abstract
Complement receptor one (CR1) is a ligand for the rosetting of Plasmodium falciparum infected red cells with uninfected cells. Since CR1 exhibits three known polymorphisms, we studied European-Americans (n = 112) and African-Americans (n = 330) and Malians (n = 158) to determine if genetic differences existed in an area endemic for malaria that could offer a survival advantage. The frequencies of Knops blood group phenotypes McC(b+) and Sl(a−) were greatly increased in Africans vs Europeans. Although the frequency of McC(b+) was similar between Africans from the USA or Mali, the Sl(a−) phenotype was significantly higher in Mali (39% vs 65%, respectively). There was an increased frequency of the largest size (250 kD) of CR1 in Mali, but this did not differ significantly from the USA (P = 0.09). Both cohorts of Africans had higher expression of red cell CR1 than European-Americans but this showed little difference between the USA and Mali groups. Thus, the most important CR1 polymorphism relevant to rosetting of malaria infected cells appears to be the Knops blood group.
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This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health RO1 AI 42367 (JMM) and the National Blood Foundation (JMM).
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Moulds, J., Kassambara, L., Middleton, J. et al. Identification of complement receptor one (CR1) polymorphisms in West Africa. Genes Immun 1, 325–329 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.gene.6363676
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.gene.6363676
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