Karamoko Niaré Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Consultant

John Brown University

faculty

11 h-index 59 pubs 1,496 cited

Is this your profile? Verify and claim your profile

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Karamoko Niaré is a consultant at John Brown University who specializes in malaria research and control, as well as other mosquito-borne diseases. His work encompasses vaccines and immunoinformatics, computational drug discovery, and the study of parasite-host interactions. Dr. Niaré's research has recently focused on the evolution and prevalence of antimalarial drug resistance. His contributions include studies on artemisinin resistance in Uganda and Tanzania, identifying multiple origins and the expansion of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine resistance. He has also contributed to clinical trials assessing the safety and efficacy of malaria transmission-blocking vaccines in Mali.

Metrics

  • h-index: 11
  • Publications: 59
  • Citations: 1,496

Selected Publications

  • Genome-wide SNP genotyping of <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> isolates across Mali reveals major impacts of <i>Pfsa1</i> and PfCRT K76T selections on parasite populations (2025) DOI
  • A novel locus associated with decreased susceptibility of <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> to lumefantrine and dihydroartemisinin has emerged and spread in Uganda (2025) DOI
  • Towards an open analysis ecosystem for <i>Plasmodium</i> genomic epidemiology (2025) DOI
  • Highly multiplex molecular inversion probe panel in Plasmodium falciparum targeting common SNPs approximates whole genome sequencing assessments for selection and relatedness (2025) DOI
  • Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2024) DOI
  • Author response: Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2024) DOI
  • Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2024) DOI
  • Author response: Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2024) DOI
  • Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2023) DOI
  • Strong isolation by distance and evidence of population microstructure reflect ongoing Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Zanzibar (2023) DOI
  • An Optimized GATK4 Pipeline for Plasmodium falciparum Whole Genome Sequencing Variant Calling and Analysis (2023) DOI

Collaborators

Researchers in the database who share publications

Similar Researchers

Based on overlapping research topics