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Dive into the research topics where Thomas E. Wellems is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas E. Wellems.


Molecular Cell | 2000

Mutations in the P. falciparum Digestive Vacuole Transmembrane Protein PfCRT and Evidence for Their Role in Chloroquine Resistance

David A. Fidock; Takashi Nomura; Angela K. Talley; Roland A. Cooper; Sergey M. Dzekunov; Michael T. Ferdig; Lyann M. B. Ursos; Amar Bir Singh Sidhu; Bronwen Naudé; Kirk W. Deitsch; Xin-Zhuan Su; John C. Wootton; Paul D. Roepe; Thomas E. Wellems

The determinant of verapamil-reversible chloroquine resistance (CQR) in a Plasmodium falciparum genetic cross maps to a 36 kb segment of chromosome 7. This segment harbors a 13-exon gene, pfcrt, having point mutations that associate completely with CQR in parasite lines from Asia, Africa, and South America. These data, transfection results, and selection of a CQR line harboring a novel K761 mutation point to a central role for the PfCRT protein in CQR. This transmembrane protein localizes to the parasite digestive vacuole (DV), the site of CQ action, where increased compartment acidification associates with PfCRT point mutations. Mutations in PfCRT may result in altered chloroquine flux or reduced drug binding to hematin through an effect on DV pH.


Cell | 1995

The large diverse gene family var encodes proteins involved in cytoadherence and antigenic variation of plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes

Xin-Zhuan Su; Virginia M. Heatwole; Samuel P. Wertheimer; Frangoise Guinet; Jacqueline A. Herrfeldt; David S. Peterson; Jeffrey A. Ravetch; Thomas E. Wellems

The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum evades host immunity by varying the antigenic and adhesive character of infected erythrocytes. We describe a large and extremely diverse family of P. falciparum genes (var) that encode 200-350 kDa proteins having the expected properties of antigenically variant adhesion molecules. Predicted amino acid sequences of var genes show a variable extracellular segment with domains having receptor-binding features, a transmembrane sequence, and a terminal segment that is a probable submembrane anchor. There are 50-150 var genes on multiple parasite chromosomes, and some are in clustered arrangements. var probes detect two classes of transcripts in steady-state RNA: 7-9 kb var transcripts, and an unusual family of 1.8-2.4 kb transcripts that may be involved in expression or rearrangements of var genes.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2001

A MOLECULAR MARKER FOR CHLOROQUINE-RESISTANT FALCIPARUM MALARIA

Abdoulaye Djimde; Ogobara K. Doumbo; Joseph F. Cortese; Kassoum Kayentao; Safi N. Doumbo; Yacouba Diourte; Drissa Coulibaly; Alassane Dicko; Xin-Zhuan Su; Takashi Nomura; David A. Fidock; Thomas E. Wellems; Christopher V. Plowe

BACKGROUND Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum malaria is a major health problem, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Chloroquine resistance has been associated in vitro with point mutations in two genes, pfcrt and pfmdr 1, which encode the P. falciparum digestive-vacuole transmembrane proteins PfCRT and Pgh1, respectively. METHODS To assess the value of these mutations as markers for clinical chloroquine resistance, we measured the association between the mutations and the response to chloroquine treatment in patients with uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Mali. The frequencies of the mutations in patients before and after treatment were compared for evidence of selection of resistance factors as a result of exposure to chloroquine. RESULTS The pfcrt mutation resulting in the substitution of threonine (T76) for lysine at position 76 was present in all 60 samples from patients with chloroquine-resistant infections (those that persisted or recurred after treatment), as compared with a base-line prevalence of 41 percent in samples obtained before treatment from 116 randomly selected patients (P<0.001), indicating absolute selection for this mutation. The pfmdr 1 mutation resulting in the substitution of tyrosine for asparagine at position 86 was also selected for, since it was present in 48 of 56 post-treatment samples from patients with chloroquine-resistant infections (86 percent), as compared with a base-line prevalence of 50 percent in 115 samples obtained before treatment (P<0.001). The presence of pfcrt T76 was more strongly associated with the development of chloroquine resistance (odds ratio, 18.8; 95 percent confidence interval, 6.5 to 58.3) than was the presence of pfmdr 1 Y86 (odds ratio, 3.2; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.5 to 6.8) or the presence of both mutations (odds ratio, 9.8; 95 percent confidence interval, 4.4 to 22.1). CONCLUSIONS This study shows an association between the pfcrt T76 mutation in P. falciparum and the development of chloroquine resistance during the treatment of malaria. This mutation can be used as a marker in surveillance for chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Chloroquine-Resistant Malaria

Thomas E. Wellems; Christopher V. Plowe

The development of chloroquine as an antimalarial drug and the subsequent evolution of drug-resistant Plasmodium strains had major impacts on global public health in the 20th century. In P. falciparum, the cause of the most lethal human malaria, chloroquine resistance is linked to multiple mutations in PfCRT, a protein that likely functions as a transporter in the parasites digestive vacuole membrane. Rapid diagnostic assays for PfCRT mutations are already employed as surveillance tools for drug resistance. Here, we review recent field studies that support the central role of PfCRT mutations in chloroquine resistance. These studies suggest chloroquine resistance arose in > or = 4 distinct geographic foci and substantiate an important role of immunity in the outcomes of resistant infections after chloroquine treatment. P. vivax, which also causes human malaria, appears to differ from P. falciparum in its mechanism of chloroquine resistance. Investigation of the resistance mechanisms and of the role of immunity in therapeutic outcomes will support new approaches to drugs that can take the place of chloroquine or augment its efficiency.


Nature | 2000

Frequent ectopic recombination of virulence factor genes in telomeric chromosome clusters of P. falciparum.

Lucio H. Freitas-Junior; Emmanuel Bottius; Lindsay Ann Pirrit; Kirk W. Deitsch; Christine Scheidig; Françoise Guinet; Ulf Nehrbass; Thomas E. Wellems; Artur Scherf

Persistent and recurrent infections by Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites result from the ability of the parasite to undergo antigenic variation and evade host immune attack. P. falciparum parasites generate high levels of variability in gene families that comprise virulence determinants of cytoadherence and antigenic variation, such as the var genes. These genes encode the major variable parasite protein (PfEMP-1), and are expressed in a mutually exclusive manner at the surface of the erythrocyte infected by P. falciparum. Here we identify a mechanism by which var gene sequences undergo recombination at frequencies much higher than those expected from homologous crossover events alone. These recombination events occur between subtelomeric regions of heterologous chromosomes, which associate in clusters near the nuclear periphery in asexual blood-stage parasites or in bouquet-like configurations near one pole of the elongated nuclei in sexual parasite forms. We propose that the alignment of var genes in heterologous chromosomes facilitates gene conversion and promotes the diversity of antigenic and adhesive phenotypes. The association of virulence factors with a specific nuclear subcompartment may also have implications for variation during mitotic recombination in asexual blood stages.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Impaired cytoadherence of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes containing sickle hemoglobin

Rushina Cholera; Nathaniel J. Brittain; Mark R. Gillrie; Tatiana M. Lopera-Mesa; Seidina A. S. Diakite; Takayuki Arie; Michael Krause; Aldiouma Guindo; Abby Tubman; Hisashi Fujioka; Dapa A. Diallo; Ogobara K. Doumbo; May Ho; Thomas E. Wellems; Rick M. Fairhurst

Sickle trait, the heterozygous state of normal hemoglobin A (HbA) and sickle hemoglobin S (HbS), confers protection against malaria in Africa. AS children infected with Plasmodium falciparum are less likely than AA children to suffer the symptoms or severe manifestations of malaria, and they often carry lower parasite densities than AA children. The mechanisms by which sickle trait might confer such malaria protection remain unclear. We have compared the cytoadherence properties of parasitized AS and AA erythrocytes, because it is by these properties that parasitized erythrocytes can sequester in postcapillary microvessels of critical tissues such as the brain and cause the life-threatening complications of malaria. Our results show that the binding of parasitized AS erythrocytes to microvascular endothelial cells and blood monocytes is significantly reduced relative to the binding of parasitized AA erythrocytes. Reduced binding correlates with the altered display of P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein-1 (PfEMP-1), the parasites major cytoadherence ligand and virulence factor on the erythrocyte surface. These findings identify a mechanism of protection for HbS that has features in common with that of hemoglobin C (HbC). Coinherited hemoglobin polymorphisms and naturally acquired antibodies to PfEMP-1 may influence the degree of malaria protection in AS children by further weakening cytoadherence interactions.


Cell | 1997

Complex Polymorphisms in an ∼330 kDa Protein Are Linked to Chloroquine-Resistant P. falciparum in Southeast Asia and Africa

Xin-Zhuan Su; Laura A. Kirkman; Hisashi Fujioka; Thomas E. Wellems

Chloroquine resistance in a P. falciparum cross maps as a Mendelian trait to a 36 kb segment of chromosome 7. This segment harbors cg2, a gene encoding a unique approximately 330 kDa protein with complex polymorphisms. A specific set of polymorphisms in 20 chloroquine-resistant parasites from Asia and Africa, in contrast with numerous differences in 21 sensitive parasites, suggests selection of a cg2 allele originating in Indochina over 40 years ago. One chloroquine-sensitive clone exhibited this allele, suggesting another resistance component. South American parasites have cg2 polymorphisms consistent with a separate origin of resistance. CG2 protein is found at the parasite periphery, a site of chloroquine transport, and in association with hemozoin of the digestive vacuole, where chloroquine inhibits heme polymerization.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Malaria biology and disease pathogenesis: insights for new treatments

Louis H. Miller; Hans Ackerman; Xin-Zhuan Su; Thomas E. Wellems

Plasmodium falciparum malaria, an infectious disease caused by a parasitic protozoan, claims the lives of nearly a million children each year in Africa alone and is a top public health concern. Evidence is accumulating that resistance to artemisinin derivatives, the frontline therapy for the asexual blood stage of the infection, is developing in southeast Asia. Renewed initiatives to eliminate malaria will benefit from an expanded repertoire of antimalarials, including new drugs that kill circulating P. falciparum gametocytes, thereby preventing transmission. Our current understanding of the biology of asexual blood-stage parasites and gametocytes and the ability to culture them in vitro lends optimism that high-throughput screenings of large chemical libraries will produce a new generation of antimalarial drugs. There is also a need for new therapies to reduce the high mortality of severe malaria. An understanding of the pathophysiology of severe disease may identify rational targets for drugs that improve survival.


Cell | 1990

The duffy receptor family of Plasmodium knowlesi is located within the micronemes of invasive malaria merozoites.

John H. Adams; Dlana E. Hudson; Motomi Torii; Gary E. Ward; Thomas E. Wellems; Masamichi Aikawa; Louis H. Miller

Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium knowlesi merozoites invade human erythrocytes that express Duffy blood group surface determinants. A soluble parasite protein of 135 kd binds specifically to a human Duffy antigen. Using antisera affinity purified on the 135 kd protein, we cloned a gene that encodes a member of a P. knowlesi family of erythrocyte binding proteins. The gene is a member of a family that includes three homologous genes located on separate chromosomes. Two genes are expressed as major membrane-bound products that give rise to soluble erythrocyte binding proteins: the 135 kd Duffy binding protein and a 138 kd protein that binds only rhesus erythrocytes. These different erythrocyte binding specificities may result from sequence divergence of the homologous genes. The Duffy receptor family is localized in micronemes, an organelle found in all organisms of the phylum Apicomplexa.


PLOS Medicine | 2011

A research agenda for malaria eradication: drugs.

Pedro L. Alonso; Quique Bassat; Fred Binka; T Brewer; R Chandra; J. Culpepper; Rhoel R. Dinglasan; K Duncan; S Duparc; Mark M. Fukuda; R Laxminarayan; MacArthur; Magill A; C Marzetta; J. Milman; T Mutabingwa; François Nosten; S Nwaka; Myaing M. Nyunt; C Ohrt; Christopher V. Plowe; J Pottage; Ric N. Price; Pascal Ringwald; A. Serazin; Dennis Shanks; Robert E. Sinden; Marcel Tanner; H Vial; Sa Ward

The Malaria Eradication Research Agenda (malERA) Consultative Group on Drugs present a research and development agenda to ensure that appropriate drugs are available for use in malaria eradication.

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Xin-Zhuan Su

National Institutes of Health

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David A. Fidock

Columbia University Medical Center

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Karen Hayton

National Institutes of Health

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Jianbing Mu

National Institutes of Health

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Louis H. Miller

National Institutes of Health

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Hisashi Fujioka

Case Western Reserve University

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