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April 30, 2010

Evolution of Malaria Resistance in Primates

Humans and baboons share similar evolutionary histories and environments in the East African savanna. Parallel evolution has also been demonstrated in how variation of the Duffy gene affects their respective resistance or susceptibility to infection by malaria parasites. The mechanism is well-known in humans: when the Duffy gene is "on," it builds receptors on the surface of red blood cells, allowing malaria parasites to land; when the gene is "off," there is no infection.

This image accompanied NSF press release, "Variation in the Same Gene Affects Rate of Parasite Infection in Both Humans and Baboons."

Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation


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