Evidence of Selective Sweeps in Genes Conferring Resistance to Chloroquine and Pyrimethamine in Plasmodium falciparum Isolates in India

Author:

Mixson-Hayden Tonya12,Jain Vidhan3,McCollum Andrea M.1,Poe Amanda12,Nagpal Avinash C.4,Dash Aditya P.5,Stiles Jonathan K.6,Udhayakumar Venkatachalam1,Singh Neeru37

Affiliation:

1. Malaria Branch, Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

2. Atlanta Research and Education Foundation, Decatur, Georgia

3. National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR) Field Station

4. Nethaji Subhash Chandra Bose Medical College Hospital

5. National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR), Delhi, India

6. Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta

7. Regional Medical Research Center for Tribals, Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh

Abstract

ABSTRACT Treatment of Plasmodium falciparum is complicated by the emergence and spread of parasite resistance to many of the first-line drugs used to treat malaria. Antimalarial drug resistance has been associated with specific point mutations in several genes, suggesting that these single nucleotide polymorphisms can be useful in tracking the emergence of drug resistance. In India, P. falciparum infection can manifest itself as asymptomatic, mild, or severe malaria, with or without cerebral involvement. We tested whether chloroquine- and antifolate drug-resistant genotypes would be more commonly associated with cases of cerebral malaria than with cases of mild malaria in the province of Jabalpur, India, by genotyping the dhps , dhfr , pfmdr-1 , and pfcrt genes using pyrosequencing, direct sequencing, and real-time PCR. Further, we used microsatellites surrounding the genes to determine the origins and spread of the drug-resistant genotypes in this area. Resistance to chloroquine was essentially fixed, with 95% of the isolates harboring the pfcrt K76T mutation. Resistant genotypes of dhfr , dhps , and pfmdr-1 were found in 94%, 17%, and 77% of the isolates, respectively. Drug-resistant genotypes were equally likely to be associated with cerebral malaria as with mild malaria. We found evidence of a selective sweep in pfcrt and, to a lesser degree, in dhfr , indicating high levels of resistance to chloroquine and evolving resistance to pyrimethamine. Microsatellites surrounding pfcrt indicate that the resistant genotypes (SVMNT) were most similar to those found in Papua New Guinea.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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