Heritability of Malaria in Africa
Date
2008-11-08Author
Mackinnon, Margaret J.
Mwangi, Tabitha
Snow, Robert W.
Marsh, Kevin
Williams, Thomas N.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background
While many individual genes have been identified that confer protection against malaria, the
overall impact of host genetics on malarial risk remains unknown.
Methods and Findings
We have used pedigree-based genetic variance component analysis to determine the relative
contributions of genetic and other factors to the variability in incidence of malaria and other
infectious diseases in two cohorts of children living on the coast of Kenya. In the first, we
monitored the incidence of mild clinical malaria and other febrile diseases through active
surveillance of 640 children 10 y old or younger, living in 77 different households for an average
of 2.7 y. In the second, we recorded hospital admissions with malaria and other infectious
diseases in a birth cohort of 2,914 children for an average of 4.1 y. Mean annual incidence rates
for mild and hospital-admitted malaria were 1.6 and 0.054 episodes per person per year,
respectively. Twenty-four percent and 25% of the total variation in these outcomes was
explained by additively acting host genes, and household explained a further 29% and 14%,
respectively. The haemoglobin S gene explained only 2% of the total variation. For nonmalarial
infections, additive genetics explained 39% and 13% of the variability in fevers and hospitaladmitted
infections, while household explained a further 9% and 30%, respectively.
Conclusion
Genetic and unidentified household factors each accounted for around one quarter of the
total variability in malaria incidence in our study population. The genetic effect was well
beyond that explained by the anticipated effects of the haemoglobinopathies alone,
suggesting the existence of many protective genes, each individually resulting in small
population effects. While studying these genes may well provide insights into pathogenesis
and resistance in human malaria, identifying and tackling the household effects must be the
more efficient route to reducing the burden of disease in malaria-endemic areas.