Malaria as ancient as humanity, says study
June 18th, 2010 - 5:33 pm ICT by IANSLondon, June 18 (IANS) Malaria, the scourge of mankind, is as ancient as humanity itself and tens of thousands of years older than previously thought.
An international team, led by Imperial College London (ICL) researchers, has found that the deadly tropical disease evolved alongside anatomically modern humans and moved with our ancestors as they migrated out of Africa around 60-80,000 years ago.
The findings and the techniques in the study could be important in informing current control strategies aimed at reducing the prevalence of malaria.
There are an estimated 230 million cases each year, causing between one and three million deaths, and around 1.4 billion people are considered to be at risk of infection.
Francois Balloux from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre at ICL, who led the study, said: “Most recent work… has worked on the premise that the disease arose alongside the development of agriculture around 10,000 years ago.”
“Our research shows that the malaria parasite has evolved and spread alongside humans and is at least as old as the event of the human expansion out of Africa 60-80,000 years ago.”
The international team worked on the largest collection of malaria parasites ever assembled. By characterising them by DNA sequencing they were able to track the progress of malaria across the tropics and to calculate the age of the parasite.
The scientists discovered clear correlation of decreasing genetic diversity with distance from sub-Saharan Africa. This accurately mirrored the same data for humans suggesting strong evidence of co-evolution and migration, said an ICL release.
Balloux said: “The genetic sequencing of the malaria parasite shows a geographic spread pattern with striking similarities to studies on humans. This points to a shared geographic origin, age and route of spread around the world….”
The research is published in Current Biology.
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Tags: control strategies, current biology, current control, dna sequencing, genetic diversity, geographic origin, human expansion, imperial college london, malaria parasite, malaria parasites, medical research council, mrc centre, out of africa, prevalence, scourge of mankind, spread pattern, striking similarities, sub saharan africa, tropical disease, tropics