Data from: Plasmodium vivax diversity and population structure across four continents
Cristian Koepfli, Priscila T. Rodrigues, Tiago Antao, Pamela Orjuela-Sánchez, Peter Van Den Eede, Dionicia Gamboa, Nguyen Van Hong, Jorge Bendezu, Annette Erhart, Céline Barnadas, Arsène Ratsimbasoa, Didier Menard, Carlo Severini, Michela Menegon, Baki Y. M. Nour, Nadira Karunaweera, Ivo Mueller, Marcelo U. Ferreira, Ingrid Felger & Bakri Y. M. Nour
Plasmodium vivax is the geographically most widespread human malaria parasite. To analyze patterns of microsatellite diversity and population structure across countries of different transmission intensity, genotyping data from 11 microsatellite markers was either generated or compiled from 841 isolates from four continents collected in 1999–2008. Diversity was highest in South-East Asia (mean allelic richness 10.0–12.8), intermediate in the South Pacific (8.1–9.9) Madagascar and Sudan (7.9–8.4), and lowest in South America and Central Asia (5.5–7.2). A...
Affiliations
-
University of Gezira1
-
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research1
-
University of Melbourne1
-
Istituto Superiore di Sanità1
-
University of Colombo1
-
University of Basel1
-
University of Sao Paulo1
-
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute1
-
Institut Pasteur de Madagascar1
-
Institut Pasteur du Cambodge1