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Dive into the research topics where Christina Hubbart is active.

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Featured researches published by Christina Hubbart.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Reappraisal of known malaria resistance loci in a large multicenter study

Kirk A. Rockett; Geraldine M. Clarke; Kathryn Fitzpatrick; Christina Hubbart; Anna Jeffreys; Kate Rowlands; Rachel Craik; Muminatou Jallow; David J. Conway; Kalifa Bojang; Margaret Pinder; Stanley Usen; Fatoumatta Sisay-Joof; Giorgio Sirugo; Ousmane Toure; Mahamadou A. Thera; Salimata Konate; Sibiry Sissoko; Amadou Niangaly; Belco Poudiougou; V. Mangano; Edith C. Bougouma; Sodiomon B. Sirima; David Modiano; Lucas Amenga-Etego; Anita Ghansah; Kwadwo A. Koram; Michael D. Wilson; Anthony Enimil; Jennifer L. Evans

Many human genetic associations with resistance to malaria have been reported, but few have been reliably replicated. We collected data on 11,890 cases of severe malaria due to Plasmodium falciparum and 17,441 controls from 12 locations in Africa, Asia and Oceania. We tested 55 SNPs in 27 loci previously reported to associate with severe malaria. There was evidence of association at P < 1 × 10−4 with the HBB, ABO, ATP2B4, G6PD and CD40LG loci, but previously reported associations at 22 other loci did not replicate in the multicenter analysis. The large sample size made it possible to identify authentic genetic effects that are heterogeneous across populations or phenotypes, with a striking example being the main African form of G6PD deficiency, which reduced the risk of cerebral malaria but increased the risk of severe malarial anemia. The finding that G6PD deficiency has opposing effects on different fatal complications of P. falciparum infection indicates that the evolutionary origins of this common human genetic disorder are more complex than previously supposed.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Multiple populations of artemisinin-resistant Plasmodium falciparum in Cambodia

Olivo Miotto; Jacob Almagro-Garcia; Magnus Manske; Bronwyn MacInnis; Susana Campino; Kirk A. Rockett; Chanaki Amaratunga; Pharath Lim; Seila Suon; Sokunthea Sreng; Jennifer M. Anderson; Socheat Duong; Chea Nguon; Char Meng Chuor; David L. Saunders; Youry Se; Chantap Lon; Mark M. Fukuda; Lucas Amenga-Etego; Abraham Hodgson; Victor Asoala; Mallika Imwong; Shannon Takala-Harrison; François Nosten; Xin-Zhuan Su; Pascal Ringwald; Frédéric Ariey; Christiane Dolecek; Tran Tinh Hien; Maciej F. Boni

We describe an analysis of genome variation in 825 P. falciparum samples from Asia and Africa that identifies an unusual pattern of parasite population structure at the epicenter of artemisinin resistance in western Cambodia. Within this relatively small geographic area, we have discovered several distinct but apparently sympatric parasite subpopulations with extremely high levels of genetic differentiation. Of particular interest are three subpopulations, all associated with clinical resistance to artemisinin, which have skewed allele frequency spectra and high levels of haplotype homozygosity, indicative of founder effects and recent population expansion. We provide a catalog of SNPs that show high levels of differentiation in the artemisinin-resistant subpopulations, including codon variants in transporter proteins and DNA mismatch repair proteins. These data provide a population-level genetic framework for investigating the biological origins of artemisinin resistance and for defining molecular markers to assist in its elimination.


Nature | 2012

Analysis of Plasmodium falciparum diversity in natural infections by deep sequencing

Magnus Manske; Olivo Miotto; Susana Campino; Sarah Auburn; Jacob Almagro-Garcia; Gareth Maslen; Jack O’Brien; Abdoulaye Djimde; Ogobara K. Doumbo; Issaka Zongo; Jean-Bosco Ouédraogo; Pascal Michon; Ivo Mueller; Peter Siba; Alexis Nzila; Steffen Borrmann; Steven M. Kiara; Kevin Marsh; Hongying Jiang; Xin-Zhuan Su; Chanaki Amaratunga; Rick M. Fairhurst; Duong Socheat; François Nosten; Mallika Imwong; Nicholas J. White; Mandy Sanders; Elisa Anastasi; Dan Alcock; Eleanor Drury

Malaria elimination strategies require surveillance of the parasite population for genetic changes that demand a public health response, such as new forms of drug resistance. Here we describe methods for the large-scale analysis of genetic variation in Plasmodium falciparum by deep sequencing of parasite DNA obtained from the blood of patients with malaria, either directly or after short-term culture. Analysis of 86,158 exonic single nucleotide polymorphisms that passed genotyping quality control in 227 samples from Africa, Asia and Oceania provides genome-wide estimates of allele frequency distribution, population structure and linkage disequilibrium. By comparing the genetic diversity of individual infections with that of the local parasite population, we derive a metric of within-host diversity that is related to the level of inbreeding in the population. An open-access web application has been established for the exploration of regional differences in allele frequency and of highly differentiated loci in the P. falciparum genome.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Imputation-Based Meta-Analysis of Severe Malaria in Three African Populations

Gavin Band; Luke Jostins; Matti Pirinen; Katja Kivinen; Muminatou Jallow; Fatoumatta Sisay-Joof; Kalifa Bojang; Margaret Pinder; Giorgio Sirugo; David J. Conway; Vysaul Nyirongo; David Kachala; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Terrie E. Taylor; Carolyne Ndila; Norbert Peshu; Kevin Marsh; Thomas N. Williams; Daniel Alcock; Robert Andrews; Sarah Edkins; Emma Gray; Christina Hubbart; Anna Jeffreys; Kate Rowlands; Kathrin Schuldt; Taane G. Clark; Kerrin S. Small; Yik-Ying Teo; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski

Combining data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) conducted at different locations, using genotype imputation and fixed-effects meta-analysis, has been a powerful approach for dissecting complex disease genetics in populations of European ancestry. Here we investigate the feasibility of applying the same approach in Africa, where genetic diversity, both within and between populations, is far more extensive. We analyse genome-wide data from approximately 5,000 individuals with severe malaria and 7,000 population controls from three different locations in Africa. Our results show that the standard approach is well powered to detect known malaria susceptibility loci when sample sizes are large, and that modern methods for association analysis can control the potential confounding effects of population structure. We show that pattern of association around the haemoglobin S allele differs substantially across populations due to differences in haplotype structure. Motivated by these observations we consider new approaches to association analysis that might prove valuable for multicentre GWAS in Africa: we relax the assumptions of SNP–based fixed effect analysis; we apply Bayesian approaches to allow for heterogeneity in the effect of an allele on risk across studies; and we introduce a region-based test to allow for heterogeneity in the location of causal alleles.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Genomic analysis of local variation and recent evolution in Plasmodium vivax

Richard D. Pearson; Roberto Amato; Sarah Auburn; Olivo Miotto; Jacob Almagro-Garcia; Chanaki Amaratunga; Seila Suon; Sivanna Mao; Rintis Noviyanti; Hidayat Trimarsanto; Jutta Marfurt; Nicholas M. Anstey; Timothy William; Maciej F. Boni; Christiane Dolecek; Hien Tinh Tran; Nicholas J. White; Pascal Michon; Peter Siba; Livingstone Tavul; Gabrielle Harrison; Alyssa E. Barry; Ivo Mueller; Marcelo U. Ferreira; Nadira D. Karunaweera; Milijaona Randrianarivelojosia; Qi Gao; Christina Hubbart; Lee Hart; Ben Jeffery

The widespread distribution and relapsing nature of Plasmodium vivax infection present major challenges for the elimination of malaria. To characterize the genetic diversity of this parasite in individual infections and across the population, we performed deep genome sequencing of >200 clinical samples collected across the Asia-Pacific region and analyzed data on >300,000 SNPs and nine regions of the genome with large copy number variations. Individual infections showed complex patterns of genetic structure, with variation not only in the number of dominant clones but also in their level of relatedness and inbreeding. At the population level, we observed strong signals of recent evolutionary selection both in known drug resistance genes and at new loci, and these varied markedly between geographical locations. These findings demonstrate a dynamic landscape of local evolutionary adaptation in the parasite population and provide a foundation for genomic surveillance to guide effective strategies for control and elimination of P. vivax.


Science | 2017

Resistance to malaria through structural variation of red blood cell invasion receptors

Ellen M. Leffler; Gavin Band; George B.J. Busby; Katja Kivinen; Geraldine M. Clarke; Kalifa Bojang; David J. Conway; Muminatou Jallow; Fatoumatta Sisay-Joof; Edith C. Bougouma; V. Mangano; David Modiano; Sodiomon B. Sirima; Eric A. Achidi; Tobias O. Apinjoh; Kevin Marsh; Carolyne Ndila; Norbert Peshu; Thomas N. Williams; Chris Drakeley; Alphaxard Manjurano; Hugh Reyburn; Eleanor M. Riley; David Kachala; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Vysaul Nyirongo; Terrie E. Taylor; Nicole Thornton; Louise Tilley; Shane Grimsley

Structural variants are mapped that are correlated with a reduced risk of severe malaria. Pathogens select for genomic variants Large-scale deletions and duplications of genes, referred to as structural variants (SVs), are common within the human genome and have been linked to disease. Examining a genomic region that appears to confer a selective benefit, Leffler et al. used fine mapping to identify a specific SV that reduces the risk of severe malaria by an estimated 40% (see the Perspective by Winzeler). Data from African individuals revealed that populations harbor different SVs in this region. Furthermore, by dissecting a highly complex genomic region, the authors identified the likely causal element. This element encodes hybrid genes that affect glycophorin proteins, which are used by the malarial parasite in infection and are associated with resistance to severe disease. Science, this issue p. eaam6393; see also p. 1122 INTRODUCTION Malaria parasites cause human disease by invading and replicating inside red blood cells. In the case of Plasmodium falciparum, this can lead to severe forms of malaria that are a major cause of childhood mortality in Africa. This species of parasite enters the red blood cell through interactions with surface proteins including the glycophorins GYPA and GYPB, which determine the polymorphic MNS blood group system. In a recent genome-wide association study, we identified alleles associated with protection against severe malaria near the cluster of genes encoding these invasion receptors. RATIONALE Investigation of genetic variants at this locus and their relation to severe malaria is challenging because of the high sequence similarity between the neighboring glycophorin genes and the relative lack of available sequence data capturing the genetic diversity of sub-Saharan Africa. To better assess whether variation in the glycophorin genes could explain the signal of association, we generated additional sequence data from sub-Saharan African populations and developed an analytical approach to characterize structural variation at this complex locus. RESULTS Using 765 newly sequenced human genomes from 10 African ethnic groups along with data from the 1000 Genomes Project, we generated a reference panel of haplotypes across the glycophorin region. In addition to single-nucleotide polymorphisms and short indels, we assayed large copy number variants (CNVs) using sequencing read depth and uncovered extensive structural diversity. By imputing from this reference panel into 4579 severe malaria cases and 5310 controls from three African populations, we found that a complex CNV, here called DUP4, is associated with resistance to severe malaria and fully explains the previously reported signal of association. In our sample, DUP4 is present only in east Africa, and this localization, as well as the extent of similarity between DUP4 haplotypes, suggests that it has recently increased in frequency, presumably under natural selection due to malaria. To evaluate the potential functional consequences of this structural variant, we analyzed high-coverage sequence-read data from multiple individuals to generate a model of the DUP4 chromosome structure. The DUP4 haplotype contains five glycophorin genes, including two hybrid genes that juxtapose the extracellular domain of GYPB with the transmembrane and intracellular domains of GYPA. Noting that these predicted hybrids are characteristic of the Dantu antigen in the MNS blood group system, we sequenced a Dantu positive individual and confirmed that DUP4 is the molecular basis of the Dantu NE blood group variant. CONCLUSION Although a role for GYPA and GYPB in parasite invasion is well known, a direct link between glycophorin polymorphisms and clinical susceptibility to malaria has been elusive. Here we have provided a systematic catalog of CNVs, describing structural diversity that may have functional importance at this locus. Our results identify a specific variant that encodes hybrid glycophorin proteins and is associated with protection against severe malaria. This discovery calls for further work to determine how this particular molecular rearrangement affects parasite invasion and the red blood cell response and may lead us toward new parasite vulnerabilities that can be utilized in future interventions against this deadly disease. A structural variant creating hybrid glycophorin genes is associated with protection from severe malaria. The reference haplotype carries three glycophorin genes, two of which (GYPA and GYPB) are expressed as proteins on the red blood cell surface. The malaria-protective haplotype carries five glycophorin genes, including two hybrid genes that encode the Dantu blood group antigen and are composed of a GYPB extracellular domain and GYPA intracellular domain. These glycophorins serve as receptors for malaria-parasite ligands during red blood cell invasion. The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum invades human red blood cells by a series of interactions between host and parasite surface proteins. By analyzing genome sequence data from human populations, including 1269 individuals from sub-Saharan Africa, we identify a diverse array of large copy-number variants affecting the host invasion receptor genes GYPA and GYPB. We find that a nearby association with severe malaria is explained by a complex structural rearrangement involving the loss of GYPB and gain of two GYPB-A hybrid genes, which encode a serologically distinct blood group antigen known as Dantu. This variant reduces the risk of severe malaria by 40% and has recently increased in frequency in parts of Kenya, yet it appears to be absent from west Africa. These findings link structural variation of red blood cell invasion receptors with natural resistance to severe malaria.


eLife | 2017

Characterisation of the opposing effects of G6PD deficiency on cerebral malaria and severe malarial anaemia

Geraldine M. Clarke; Kirk A. Rockett; Katja Kivinen; Christina Hubbart; Anna Jeffreys; Kate Rowlands; Muminatou Jallow; David J. Conway; Kalifa Bojang; Margaret Pinder; Stanley Usen; Fatoumatta Sisay-Joof; Giorgio Sirugo; Ousmane Toure; Mahamadou A. Thera; Salimata Konate; Sibiry Sissoko; Amadou Niangaly; Belco Poudiougou; V. Mangano; Edith C. Bougouma; Sodiomon B. Sirima; David Modiano; Lucas Amenga-Etego; Anita Ghansah; Kwadwo A. Koram; Michael D. Wilson; Anthony Enimil; Jennifer Evans; Olukemi K. Amodu

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is believed to confer protection against Plasmodium falciparum malaria, but the precise nature of the protective effect has proved difficult to define as G6PD deficiency has multiple allelic variants with different effects in males and females, and it has heterogeneous effects on the clinical outcome of P. falciparum infection. Here we report an analysis of multiple allelic forms of G6PD deficiency in a large multi-centre case-control study of severe malaria, using the WHO classification of G6PD mutations to estimate each individual’s level of enzyme activity from their genotype. Aggregated across all genotypes, we find that increasing levels of G6PD deficiency are associated with decreasing risk of cerebral malaria, but with increased risk of severe malarial anaemia. Models of balancing selection based on these findings indicate that an evolutionary trade-off between different clinical outcomes of P. falciparum infection could have been a major cause of the high levels of G6PD polymorphism seen in human populations. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.15085.001


BMC Medical Genetics | 2014

Genetic determinants of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in Kenya

Shivang S. Shah; Alex Macharia; Johnstone Makale; Sophie Uyoga; Katja Kivinen; Rachel Craik; Christina Hubbart; Thomas E. Wellems; Kirk A. Rockett; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski; Thomas N. Williams

BackgroundThe relationship between glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency and clinical phenomena such as primaquine-sensitivity and protection from severe malaria remains poorly defined, with past association studies yielding inconsistent and conflicting results. One possibility is that examination of a single genetic variant might underestimate the presence of true effects in the presence of unrecognized functional allelic diversity.MethodsWe systematically examined this possibility in Kenya, conducting a fine-mapping association study of erythrocyte G6PD activity in 1828 Kenyan children across 30 polymorphisms at or around the G6PD locus.ResultsWe demonstrate a strong functional role for c.202G>A (rs1050828), which accounts for the majority of variance in enzyme activity observed (P=1.5 × 10-200, additive model). Additionally, we identify other common variants that exert smaller, intercorrelated effects independent of c.202G>A, and haplotype analyses suggest that each variant tags one of two haplotype motifs that are opposite in sequence identity and effect direction. We posit that these effects are of biological and possible clinical significance, specifically noting that c.376A>G (rs1050829) augments 202AG heterozygote risk for deficiency trait by two-fold (OR = 2.11 [1.12 - 3.84], P=0.014).ConclusionsOur results suggest that c.202G>A is responsible for the majority of the observed prevalence of G6PD deficiency trait in Kenya, but also identify a novel role for c.376A>G as a genetic modifier which marks a common haplotype that augments the risk conferred to 202AG heterozygotes, suggesting that variation at both loci merits consideration in genetic association studies probing G6PD deficiency-associated clinical phenotypes.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2017

THE REAL McCOIL: A method for the concurrent estimation of the complexity of infection and SNP allele frequency for malaria parasites.

Hsiao-Han Chang; Colin J. Worby; Adoke Yeka; Joaniter Nankabirwa; Moses R. Kamya; Sarah G. Staedke; Grant Dorsey; Maxwell Murphy; Daniel E. Neafsey; Anna Jeffreys; Christina Hubbart; Kirk A. Rockett; Roberto Amato; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski; Caroline O. Buckee; Bryan Greenhouse

As many malaria-endemic countries move towards elimination of Plasmodium falciparum, the most virulent human malaria parasite, effective tools for monitoring malaria epidemiology are urgent priorities. P. falciparum population genetic approaches offer promising tools for understanding transmission and spread of the disease, but a high prevalence of multi-clone or polygenomic infections can render estimation of even the most basic parameters, such as allele frequencies, challenging. A previous method, COIL, was developed to estimate complexity of infection (COI) from single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data, but relies on monogenomic infections to estimate allele frequencies or requires external allele frequency data which may not available. Estimates limited to monogenomic infections may not be representative, however, and when the average COI is high, they can be difficult or impossible to obtain. Therefore, we developed THE REAL McCOIL, Turning HEterozygous SNP data into Robust Estimates of ALelle frequency, via Markov chain Monte Carlo, and Complexity Of Infection using Likelihood, to incorporate polygenomic samples and simultaneously estimate allele frequency and COI. This approach was tested via simulations then applied to SNP data from cross-sectional surveys performed in three Ugandan sites with varying malaria transmission. We show that THE REAL McCOIL consistently outperforms COIL on simulated data, particularly when most infections are polygenomic. Using field data we show that, unlike with COIL, we can distinguish epidemiologically relevant differences in COI between and within these sites. Surprisingly, for example, we estimated high average COI in a peri-urban subregion with lower transmission intensity, suggesting that many of these cases were imported from surrounding regions with higher transmission intensity. THE REAL McCOIL therefore provides a robust tool for understanding the molecular epidemiology of malaria across transmission settings.


Nature | 2017

Natural diversity of the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae

Alistair Miles; Nicholas J Harding; Giordano Botta; Chris Clarkson; Tiago Antao; Krzysztof Kozak; Daniel R. Schrider; Andrew D. Kern; Seth Redmond; Igor V. Sharakhov; Richard D. Pearson; Christina M. Bergey; Michael Fontaine; Arlete Troco; Abdoulaye Diabaté; Carlo Costantini; Kyanne Rohatgi; Nohal Elissa; Boubacar Coulibaly; Joao Dinis; Janet Midega; Charles M. Mbogo; Henry Mawejje; Jim Stalker; Kirk A. Rockett; Eleanor Drury; Dan Mead; Anna Jeffreys; Christina Hubbart; Kate Rowlands

The sustainability of malaria control in Africa is threatened by rising levels of insecticide resistance, and new tools to prevent malaria transmission are urgently needed. To gain a better understanding of the mosquito populations that transmit malaria, we sequenced the genomes of 765 wild specimens of Anopheles gambiae and Anopheles coluzzii sampled from 15 locations across Africa. The data reveal high levels of genetic diversity, with over 50 million single nucleotide polymorphisms across the 230 Mbp genome. We observe complex patterns of population structure and marked variations in local population size, some of which may be due at least in part to malaria control interventions. Insecticide resistance genes show strong signatures of recent selection associated with multiple independent mutations spreading over large geographical distances and between species. The genetic variability of natural populations substantially reduces the target space for novel gene-drive strategies for mosquito control. This large dataset provides a foundation for tracking the emergence and spread of insecticide resistance and developing new vector control tools.

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Anna Jeffreys

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Kirk A. Rockett

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Dominic P. Kwiatkowski

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Geraldine M. Clarke

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Kalifa Bojang

Medical Research Council

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