학술논문

Absence of Putative Artemisinin Resistance Mutations Among Plasmodium falciparum in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Molecular Epidemiologic Study
Document Type
article
Source
The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 211(5)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Prevention
Vector-Borne Diseases
Rare Diseases
Antimicrobial Resistance
Genetics
Infectious Diseases
Biodefense
Vaccine Related
Malaria
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Africa South of the Sahara
Antimalarials
Artemisinins
Child
Child
Preschool
Female
Gene Frequency
Genotype
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Humans
Malaria
Falciparum
Male
Molecular Epidemiology
Mutation
Plasmodium falciparum
Polymorphism
Genetic
Pregnancy
Prevalence
falciparum malaria
artemisinin resistance
drug resistance
molecular epidemiology
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Microbiology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Plasmodium falciparum parasites that are resistant to artemisinins have been detected in Southeast Asia. Resistance is associated with several polymorphisms in the parasite's K13-propeller gene. The molecular epidemiology of these artemisinin resistance genotypes in African parasite populations is unknown. We developed an assay to quantify rare polymorphisms in parasite populations that uses a pooled deep-sequencing approach to score allele frequencies, validated it by evaluating mixtures of laboratory parasite strains, and then used it to screen P. falciparum parasites from >1100 African infections collected since 2002 from 14 sites across sub-Saharan Africa. We found no mutations in African parasite populations that are associated with artemisinin resistance in Southeast Asian parasites. However, we observed 15 coding mutations, including 12 novel mutations, and limited allele sharing between parasite populations, consistent with a large reservoir of naturally occurring K13-propeller variation. Although polymorphisms associated with artemisinin resistance in P. falciparum in Southeast Asia are not prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, numerous K13-propeller coding polymorphisms circulate in Africa. Although their distributions do not support a widespread selective sweep for an artemisinin-resistant phenotype, the impact of these mutations on artemisinin susceptibility is unknown and will require further characterization. Rapid, scalable molecular surveillance offers a useful adjunct in tracking and containing artemisinin resistance.