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Study: Malaria Unlikely to Jump from Animals to Humans

In recent years, public health experts have increasingly explored the idea of eliminating the most dangerous malaria-causing parasite. But they have questioned whether getting rid of this species, calledย Plasmodium falciparum, would allow other species of the parasite to simply jump into the gap and start infecting humans with malaria.

Now, a new study led by a researcher at the University of Maryland School of Medicine indicates it is very unlikely thatย Plasmodiumย species that infect other animalsโ€”such as apes, birds and reptilesโ€”would cross over easily to humans. Using sophisticated genetic analysis,ย Joana Carneiro da Silva, PhD, found evidence showing that five other commonย Plasmodiumย species have not changed which animals they infect for at least 3 million years.

Malaria is a leading cause of disease and death throughout the world; every year it infects over 200 million people, and causes more than half a million deaths. In parts of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, the disease is common and causes enormous suffering and hardship.

The new study was published last month in the journalย Molecular Biology and Evolution.ย Dr. Silva, an assistant professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology and at theย Institute for Genome Sciencesย at the School of Medicine, was the lead author.

โ€œThis is a key question โ€“ how likely are these parasite species to jump to humans?โ€ says Dr. Silva. โ€œAnd according to our results, โ€œhost switchingโ€ by malaria-causing parasites is not at all a common event, on an evolutionary time scale.โ€

More than 200ย Plasmodiumย species have been identified.ย Plasmodium falciparumย is the most lethal of the five that are known to infect humans. Researchers are examining new approaches to reduce or eliminate Plasmodium falciparum by developing vaccines against it, for example, or spreading a bacterium that kills the mosquitoes that carry it. But some scientists have expressed concern thatย Plasmodium falciparumโ€™sย ecological niche might be quickly filled by otherย Plasmodiumย species.

Dr. Silva and her co-authors looked at hundreds of genes spread across five different species ofย Plasmodium. Their goal was to discover how closely related the genes wereโ€”in effect, how long ago they had diverged from each other. If they had separated recently, it was more likely that they could jump from infecting one species to another.

To get their results, Dr. Silva and her colleagues developed a new statistical approach to determine when Plasmodium species split off from one another. The new method uses molecular data from thousands of genes; current techniques, by contrast, use at most sequences from dozens. This new approach is not only more reliable, but also faster.

โ€œThis is exciting research that has powerful public health implications,โ€ saidย Dean E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, who is also the vice president for Medical Affairs, University of Maryland, and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and dean of the School of Medicine. โ€œIt is particularly interesting to see the application of โ€˜big dataโ€™ and genetic analysis increasingly being used to help solve the worldโ€™s most critical health problems.โ€

The research team included scientists and statisticians from the National Center for Biotechnology Information at the National Institutes of Health and the Applied Mathematics & Statistics, and Scientific Computation program at the University of Maryland, College Park.

โ€œThis is an exciting integration of mathematics and genetics,โ€ saidย David Harris, a researcher in theย UMCP Applied Mathematics & Statistics and Scientific Computationย program, who developed the statistical methods used in this research. โ€œItโ€™s great to be able to use mathematics in a way that has the potential to inform practical policy decisions.โ€

The research was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at the National Institutes of Health , and by the Intramural Research Program of the National Library of Medicine .

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