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This gene variant can mitigate malaria risk by 40 percent

Malaria is a disease caused by a plasmodium parasite, transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes.

This gene variant can mitigate malaria risk by 40 percent Representational image

New Delhi: Researchers have managed to identify a gene variant which has the potential of reducing the risk of severe malaria by at atleast 40 percent.

Malaria is a disease caused by a plasmodium parasite, transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes.

Plasmodium falciparum -- the most widespread malarial parasite in Africa which infects human red blood cells and gains entry via receptors on the cell surface and is also the most dangerous. 

More than 200 million people a year are infected with malaria and in 2015 the disease caused the deaths of nearly half a million people worldwide, revealed the research published in the journal Science.

The study identified a genetic rearrangement of red blood cell glycophorin receptors -- GYPA and GYPB genes which are unusually common in Africa -- which confers a 40 per cent reduced risk from severe malaria.

"We found some people have a complex rearrangement of GYPA and GYPB genes, forming a hybrid glycophorin, and these people are less likely to develop severe complications of the disease," said Ellen Leffler from the University of Oxford. 

Previous studies revealed that glycophorins receptors are located on the surface of red blood cells and are amongst many receptors that bind Plasmodium falciparum but were unknown to be involved in protection against malaria.

(With IANS inputs)

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