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Volume 28, Number 10—October 2022
Research

Plasmodium falciparum pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 Gene Deletions and Relatedness to Other Global Isolates, Djibouti, 2019–2020

Eric Rogier1Comments to Author , Jessica N. McCaffery1, Mohamed Ali Mohamed, Camelia Herman, Doug Nace, Rachel Daniels, Naomi Lucchi, Sophie Jones, Ira Goldman, Michael Aidoo, Qin Cheng, Edie A. Kemenang, Venkatachalam Udhayakumar, and Jane Cunningham
Author affiliations: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (E. Rogier, J.N. McCaffery, C. Herman, D. Nace, N. Lucchi, S. Jones, I. Goldman, M. Aidoo, V. Udhayakumar); Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA (J.N. McCaffery); Hôpital Général Peltier, Djibouti City, Djibouti (M.A. Mohamed); Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA (R. Daniels); Broad Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA (R. Daniels); Australian Defence Force Malaria and Infectious Disease Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Q. Cheng); World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland (E.A. Kemenang, J. Cunningham)

Main Article

Figure 4

Relatedness of Plasmodium falciparum parasites from Djibouti, 2019–2020 with other global isolates. A) Cluster PC analysis shown for neutral microsatellite data for monogenomic infections by collection from different countries: Angola (n = 32), Costa Rica (n = 14), Djibouti (n = 52), Eritrea (n = 187), Ethiopia (n = 20), Guyana (n = 27), Haiti (n = 86), Peru (n = 18), Rwanda (n = 42), Sudan (n = 37), Suriname (n = 44), Uganda (n = 25). B) Cluster PC analysis shown for neutral microsatellite data for monogenomic infections containing pfhrp2 deletions by collection from different countries: Djibouti (n = 21), Eritrea (n = 43), Peru (n = 18), Ethiopia (n = 8), Sudan (n = 4), and Suriname (n = 1). Plots shown with PC1 on x-axis and PC2 on y-axis and 95% confidence ellipses. PC, principal component.

Figure 4. Relatedness of Plasmodium falciparum parasites from Djibouti, 2019–2020 with other global isolates. A) Cluster PC analysis shown for neutral microsatellite data for monogenomic infections by collection from different countries: Angola (n = 32), Costa Rica (n = 14), Djibouti (n = 52), Eritrea (n = 187), Ethiopia (n = 20), Guyana (n = 27), Haiti (n = 86), Peru (n = 18), Rwanda (n = 42), Sudan (n = 37), Suriname (n = 44), Uganda (n = 25). B) Cluster PC analysis shown for neutral microsatellite data for monogenomic infections containing pfhrp2 deletions by collection from different countries: Djibouti (n = 21), Eritrea (n = 43), Peru (n = 18), Ethiopia (n = 8), Sudan (n = 4), and Suriname (n = 1). Plots shown with PC1 on x-axis and PC2 on y-axis and 95% confidence ellipses. PC, principal component.

Main Article

1These authors contributed equally to this article.

Page created: August 11, 2022
Page updated: September 20, 2022
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