TLR9 polymorphisms in African populations: no association with severe malaria, but evidence of cis-variants acting on gene expression

Author:

Campino Susana,Forton Julian,Auburn Sarah,Fry Andrew,Diakite Mahamadou,Richardson Anna,Hull Jeremy,Jallow Muminatou,Sisay-Joof Fatou,Pinder Margaret,Molyneux Malcolm E,Taylor Terrie E,Rockett Kirk,Clark Taane G,Kwiatkowski Dominic P

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

Reference29 articles.

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2. Pichyangkul S, Yongvanitchit K, Kum-arb U, Hemmi H, Akira S, Krieg AM, Heppner DG, Stewart VA, Hasegawa H, Looareesuwan S, Shanks GD, Miller RS: Malaria blood stage parasites activate human plasmacytoid dendritic cells and murine dendritic cells through a Toll-like receptor 9-dependent pathway. J Immunol. 2004, 172: 4926-4933.

3. Parroche P, Lauw FN, Goutagny N, Latz E, Monks BG, Visintin A, Halmen KA, Lamphier M, Olivier M, Bartholomeu DC, Gazzinelli RT, Golenbock DT: Malaria hemozoin is immunologically inert but radically enhances innate responses by presenting malaria DNA to Toll-like receptor 9. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2007, 104: 1919-1924. 10.1073/pnas.0608745104.

4. Hisaeda H, Tetsutani K, Imai T, Moriya C, Tu L, Hamano S, Duan X, Chou B, Ishida H, Aramaki A, Shen J, Ishii KJ, Coban C, Akira S, Takeda K, Yasutomo K, Torii M, Himeno K: Malaria Parasites Require TLR9 Signaling for Immune Evasion by Activating Regulatory T Cells. J Immunol. 2008, 180: 2496-2503.

5. Amante FH, Stanley AC, Randall LM, Zhou Y, Haque A, McSweeney K, Waters AP, Janse CJ, Good MF, Hill GR, Engwerda CR: A role for natural regulatory T cells in the pathogenesis of experimental cerebral malaria. Am J Pathol. 2007, 171: 548-559. 10.2353/ajpath.2007.061033.

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