PLoS Genetics (Feb 2015)

African glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase alleles associated with protection from severe malaria in heterozygous females in Tanzania.

  • Alphaxard Manjurano,
  • Nuno Sepulveda,
  • Behzad Nadjm,
  • George Mtove,
  • Hannah Wangai,
  • Caroline Maxwell,
  • Raimos Olomi,
  • Hugh Reyburn,
  • Eleanor M Riley,
  • Christopher J Drakeley,
  • Taane G Clark,
  • MalariaGEN Consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004960
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. e1004960

Abstract

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X-linked Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) A- deficiency is prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa populations, and has been associated with protection from severe malaria. Whether females and/or males are protected by G6PD deficiency is uncertain, due in part to G6PD and malaria phenotypic complexity and misclassification. Almost all large association studies have genotyped a limited number of G6PD SNPs (e.g. G6PD202 / G6PD376), and this approach has been too blunt to capture the complete epidemiological picture. Here we have identified 68 G6PD polymorphisms and analysed 29 of these (i.e. those with a minor allele frequency greater than 1%) in 983 severe malaria cases and controls in Tanzania. We establish, across a number of SNPs including G6PD376, that only female heterozygotes are protected from severe malaria. Haplotype analysis reveals the G6PD locus to be under balancing selection, suggesting a mechanism of protection relying on alleles at modest frequency and avoiding fixation, where protection provided by G6PD deficiency against severe malaria is offset by increased risk of life-threatening complications. Our study also demonstrates that the much-needed large-scale studies of severe malaria and G6PD enzymatic function across African populations require the identification and analysis of the full repertoire of G6PD genetic markers.