Distinctive genetic structure and selection patterns in Plasmodium vivax from South Asia and East Africa

Despite the high burden of Plasmodium vivax malaria in South Asian countries, the genetic diversity of circulating parasite populations is not well described. Determinants of antimalarial drug susceptibility for P. vivax in the region have not been characterised. Our genomic analysis of global P. vi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-05, Vol.12 (1), p.3160-11, Article 3160
Hauptverfasser: Benavente, Ernest Diez, Manko, Emilia, Phelan, Jody, Campos, Monica, Nolder, Debbie, Fernandez, Diana, Velez-Tobon, Gabriel, Castaño, Alberto Tobón, Dombrowski, Jamille G., Marinho, Claudio R. F., Aguiar, Anna Caroline C., Pereira, Dhelio Batista, Sriprawat, Kanlaya, Nosten, Francois, Moon, Robert, Sutherland, Colin J., Campino, Susana, Clark, Taane G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the high burden of Plasmodium vivax malaria in South Asian countries, the genetic diversity of circulating parasite populations is not well described. Determinants of antimalarial drug susceptibility for P. vivax in the region have not been characterised. Our genomic analysis of global P. vivax ( n  = 558) establishes South Asian isolates ( n  = 92) as a distinct subpopulation, which shares ancestry with some East African and South East Asian parasites. Signals of positive selection are linked to drug resistance-associated loci including pvkelch10, pvmrp1, pvdhfr and pvdhps , and two loci linked to P. vivax invasion of reticulocytes, pvrbp1a and pvrbp1b . Significant identity-by-descent was found in extended chromosome regions common to P. vivax from India and Ethiopia, including the pvdbp gene associated with Duffy blood group binding. Our investigation provides new understanding of global P. vivax population structure and genomic diversity, and genetic evidence of recent directional selection in this important human pathogen. The genetic diversity of Plasmodium vivax strains in South Asia isn’t well described. Here, the authors sequence P. vivax from returning UK travelers and establish South Asian isolates as subpopulation distinct from East African and South East Asian isolates.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-23422-3