[PDF][PDF] Evidence for transmission of Plasmodium vivax among a duffy antigen negative population in Western Kenya

JR Ryan, JA Stoute, J Amon, RF Dunton… - American Journal of …, 2006 - academia.edu
JR Ryan, JA Stoute, J Amon, RF Dunton, R Mtalib, J Koros, B Owour, S Luckhart, RA Wirtz…
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2006academia.edu
We present evidence that a parasite with characteristics of Plasmodium vivax is being
transmitted among Duffy blood group–negative inhabitants of Kenya. Thirty-two of 4,901
Anopheles gambiae and An. funestus (0.65%) collected in Nyanza Province were ELISA
positive for the P. vivax circumsporozoite protein VK 247. All positives were found late in the
rainy season, when An. funestus predominated, and disproportionately many were found at
a single village. A P. vivax specific sequence of the SSU rRNA gene was amplified from …
Abstract
We present evidence that a parasite with characteristics of Plasmodium vivax is being transmitted among Duffy blood group–negative inhabitants of Kenya. Thirty-two of 4,901 Anopheles gambiae and An. funestus (0.65%) collected in Nyanza Province were ELISA positive for the P. vivax circumsporozoite protein VK 247. All positives were found late in the rainy season, when An. funestus predominated, and disproportionately many were found at a single village. A P. vivax specific sequence of the SSU rRNA gene was amplified from three of six ELISA-positive mosquitoes. Erythrocytes from 31 children, including 9 microscopically diagnosed as infected with P. vivax, were negative by flow cytometry for the Fy3 or Fy6 epitopes, which indicate Duffy blood group expression. A DNA fragment specific for the C terminus of the gene for P. vivax merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) was amplified from the blood of four of these children and subsequently sequenced from two.
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