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Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis

Thesis submitted to the Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kusi, Stephen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kusi, Stephen
author_browse Kusi, Stephen
author_facet Kusi, Stephen
author_sort Kusi, Stephen
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description Thesis submitted to the Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology
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id oai:ir.knust.edu.gh:123456789/5462
institution KNUST (Ghana)
language English
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:21.331Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from KNUSTSpace — Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology (Ghana)
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
publishDateSort 2013
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source_str KNUSTSpace — Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology (Ghana)
spelling oai:ir.knust.edu.gh:123456789/5462 Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis Kusi, Stephen Thesis submitted to the Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology Epidemiological evidence strongly implicates chronic Plasmodium falciparum infection in the aetiology of endemic Burkitt’s lymphoma, although the role of malaria is still not well understood. A characteristic feature of this tumour is a chromosomal translocation in which a pro-cancer gene, MYC, is juxtaposed to the promoter region of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene, leading to the uncontrolled growth of B-lymphocytes. This study was designed to test whether the malaria parasite actually resides in tonsils and can directly cause DNA damage which could then predispose to the Burkitt’s lymphoma translocation. Three methods of diagnosis, namely microscopy, rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and qPCR, were used to detect and quantify P. falciparum in blood and tonsils obtained from tonsillectomy patients. Interestingly, parasitemia was detected in tonsils by all three methods, even in cases where parasitemia was negative with whole blood. Comet assay was then performed for each sample to estimate DNA damage. DNA damage was assessed in terms of tail DNA, tail length and tail moment. Consistent with the hypothesis, student t-tests revealed significant differences in DNA damage between low- and high-probability parasitemia samples by all three comet parameters assessed (p-values 0.0266, 0.0316 and 0.0389 respectively; alpha =0.05). These data demonstrate that P. falciparum is a potent mutagen and suggest that the parasite might directly cause the characteristic translocation of endemic Burkitt's lymphoma. KNUST 2013-12-18T16:44:27Z 2023-04-20T09:04:34Z 2013-12-18T16:44:27Z 2023-04-20T09:04:34Z 2013-12-18 Thesis https://ir.knust.edu.gh/handle/123456789/5462 en application/pdf
spellingShingle Kusi, Stephen
Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title_full Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title_fullStr Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title_short Detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils: towards an understanding of malaria-related oncogenesis
title_sort detecting and quantifying plasmodium falciparum in blood and tonsils towards an understanding of malaria related oncogenesis
url https://ir.knust.edu.gh/handle/123456789/5462
work_keys_str_mv AT kusistephen detectingandquantifyingplasmodiumfalciparuminbloodandtonsilstowardsanunderstandingofmalariarelatedoncogenesis