| Literature DB >> 27176827 |
Lee Murray1, Victor A Mobegi1,2, Craig W Duffy1, Samuel A Assefa1, Dominic P Kwiatkowski3, Eugene Laman4, Kovana M Loua4, David J Conway5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In regions where malaria is endemic, individuals are often infected with multiple distinct parasite genotypes, a situation that may impact on evolution of parasite virulence and drug resistance. Most approaches to studying genotypic diversity have involved analysis of a modest number of polymorphic loci, although whole genome sequencing enables a broader characterisation of samples.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27176827 PMCID: PMC4865991 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1324-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Multiple Plasmodium falciparum genotypes in blood samples from patients with clinical malaria in Guinea assessed by genotyping with ten microsatellite loci. a Numbers of clinical isolates with given numbers of different P. falciparum genotypes detected (total N = 95). b Numbers of clinical isolates with given numbers of P. falciparum loci having >1 detectable allele out of ten loci genotyped (total N = 93 with complete ten-locus genotype profiles)
Fig. 2Concordance between microsatellite genotyping and F ws within-infection fixation indices, derived from genome-wide SNP data for Plasmodium falciparum clinical isolates from Guinea (N = 93 with complete ten-locus microsatellite genotype profiles). As expected, a highly negative relationship (Pearson’s coefficient = −0.88, P < 0.001) was seen between the F ws fixation index and the number of microsatellite loci with >1 allele detected within each infection. The numbers of clinical isolates within each x-axis category are shown in Fig. 1b
Fig. 3Correlation coefficients of Plasmodium falciparum F ws within-infection fixation indices derived from randomly sampled small numbers of SNPs, compared with indices using all genome-wide SNPs analysed. The effect of using SNPs with allele frequencies above different levels is shown. Within the overall SNP set sampled, 7684 SNPs have a minor allele frequency (MAF) of >5 %; 5004 SNPs have MAF of >10 %; 2854 SNPs have MAF of >20 %; 1719 SNPs have MAF >30 %; 833 SNPs have MAF >40 %. Replications of 100 random samples of different numbers of SNPs (between 1 and 20) were performed, and the mean correlation coefficient for each is plotted