Hemoglobin C associated with protection from severe malaria in the Dogon of Mali, a West African population with a low prevalence of hemoglobin S

Author:

Agarwal Aarti1,Guindo Aldiouma1,Cissoko Yacouba1,Taylor James G.1,Coulibaly Drissa1,Koné Abdoulaye1,Kayentao Kassoum1,Djimde Abdoulaye1,Plowe Christopher V.1,Doumbo Ogobara1,Wellems Thomas E.1,Diallo Dapa1

Affiliation:

1. From the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; the Hematology Laboratory and Malaria Research and Training Center, Department of Epidemiology of Parasitic Disease, Faculty of Medicine, Pharmacy and Odonto-Stomatology, Bamako, Mali; and the Division of Geographic Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.

Abstract

Abstract The malaria hypothesis proposes a survival advantage for individuals with hemoglobin variants in areas of endemicPlasmodium falciparum malaria. Hemoglobin C (HbC) is a possible example in West Africa, where this hemoglobin has a centric distribution with high frequencies among certain populations including the Dogon ethnic group. To test whether HbC is associated with protection from malaria, we performed a case-control study in the Dogon of Bandiagara, Mali. HbC was present in 68 of 391 (17.4%) of uncomplicated malaria control cases, whereas it was detected in only 3 of 67 cases (4.5%) of severe malaria (odds ratio [OR], 0.22;P = .01). Further, HbC was present in only 1 of 34 cases (2.9%) with cerebral manifestations, the most common presentation of severe malaria in this population (OR, 0.14; P = .03). Episodes of uncomplicated malaria and parasitemias (4800-205 050/μL) were identified in cases of homozygous HbC (HbCC), which indicates thatP falciparum parasites are able to efficiently replicate within HbCC erythrocytes in vivo. These findings suggest that HbC does not protect against infection or uncomplicated malaria but can protect against severe malaria in the Dogon population of Bandiagara, Mali. The data also suggest that the protective effect associated with HbC may be greater than that of HbS in this population.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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