Identification of Plasmodium malariae, a human malaria parasite, in imported chimpanzees

Toshiyuki Hayakawa, Nobuko Arisue, Toshifumi Udono, Hirohisa Hirai, Jetsumon Sattabongkot, Tomoko Toyama, Takafumi Tsuboi, Toshihiro Horii, Kazuyuki Tanabe

研究成果: ジャーナルへの寄稿学術誌査読

44 被引用数 (Scopus)

抄録

It is widely believed that human malaria parasites infect only man as a natural host. However, earlier morphological observations suggest that great apes are likely to be natural reservoirs as well. To identify malaria parasites in great apes, we screened 60 chimpanzees imported into Japan. Using the sequences of small subunit rRNA and the mitochondrial genome, we identified infection of Plasmodium malariae, a human malaria parasite, in two chimpanzees that were imported about thirty years ago. The chimpanzees have been asymptomatic to the present. In Japan, indigenous malaria disappeared more than fifty years ago; and thus, it is most likely inferred that the chimpanzees were infected in Africa, and P. malariae isolates were brought into Japan from Africa with their hosts, suggesting persistence of parasites at low level for thirty years. Such a long term latent infection is a unique feature of P. malariae infection in humans. To our knowledge, this is the first to report P. malariae infection in chimpanzees and a human malaria parasite from nonhuman primates imported to a nonendemic country.

本文言語英語
論文番号e7412
ジャーナルPloS one
4
10
DOI
出版ステータス出版済み - 10月 12 2009
外部発表はい

!!!All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • 一般

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