RIFINs are adhesins implicated in severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria.
Suchi GoelMia PalmkvistKirsten MollNicolas JoanninPatricia LaraReetesh R AkhouriNasim MoradiKarin ÖjemalmMattias WestmanDavide AngelettiHanna KjellinJanne LehtiöOla BlixtLars IdeströmCarl G GahmbergJill R StorryAnnika K HultMartin L OlssonGunnar von HeijneIngMarie NilssonMats WahlgrenPublished in: Nature medicine (2015)
Rosetting is a virulent Plasmodium falciparum phenomenon associated with severe malaria. Here we demonstrate that P. falciparum-encoded repetitive interspersed families of polypeptides (RIFINs) are expressed on the surface of infected red blood cells (iRBCs), where they bind to RBCs--preferentially of blood group A--to form large rosettes and mediate microvascular binding of iRBCs. We suggest that RIFINs have a fundamental role in the development of severe malaria and thereby contribute to the varying global distribution of ABO blood groups in the human population.