| Literature DB >> 27456706 |
Sarah Auburn1, David Serre2, Richard D Pearson3, Roberto Amato3, Kanlaya Sriprawat4, Sheren To1, Irene Handayuni1, Rossarin Suwanarusk5, Bruce Russell6, Eleanor Drury7, Jim Stalker7, Olivo Miotto8, Dominic P Kwiatkowski9, Francois Nosten10, Ric N Price11.
Abstract
In regions of coendemicity for Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax where mefloquine is used to treat P. falciparum infection, drug pressure mediated by increased copy numbers of the multidrug resistance 1 gene (pvmdr1) may select for mefloquine-resistant P. vivax Surveillance is not undertaken routinely owing in part to methodological challenges in detection of gene amplification. Using genomic data on 88 P. vivax samples from western Thailand, we identified pvmdr1 amplification in 17 isolates, all exhibiting tandem copies of a 37.6-kilobase pair region with identical breakpoints. A novel breakpoint-specific polymerase chain reaction assay was designed to detect the amplification. The assay demonstrated high sensitivity, identifying amplifications in 13 additional, polyclonal infections. Application to 132 further samples identified the common breakpoint in all years tested (2003-2015), with a decline in prevalence after 2012 corresponding to local discontinuation of mefloquine regimens. Assessment of the structure of pvmdr1 amplification in other geographic regions will yield information about the population-specificity of the breakpoints and underlying amplification mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium vivax; Thailand; copy number; malaria; mdr1; mefloquine; multidrug resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27456706 PMCID: PMC5034950 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiw323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Figure 1.Illustration of the breakpoint region and read depth variation in examples of isolates with no amplification and with 2, 3, and 4 predicted copies. A, Depth (height) of correctly mapping reads in examples of copy number (CN) 1 (black), CN2 (red), CN3 (green), and CN4 (blue) clonal isolates. B, Depth (height) of face-away mapping reads in the same samples, illustrating the breakpoint region. C, Genomic features in the region, including repeat regions. The pvmdr1 gene region is highlighted in pink in panels A and B.
Figure 2.Heat map illustrating the relatedness of multilocus genotypes (MLGs) in the pvmdr1 region in CN1 (top) and CN2+ (bottom) isolates. MLGs were reconstructed using allele frequency data at 87 single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the amplified region. Color is used to represent the nonreference allele frequency (proportion of reads containing the nonreference allele within that sample). Homozygote reference (Sal1) alleles are presented in red (0.0) and alternative alleles in blue (1.0). Missing genotype calls are colored white. Copy number (CN) definitions are based on genomic read depth results. Samples with a FWS of < 0.95 have been excluded. MLGs are labeled with a sample identifier and year of collection.
Concordance Between the Breakpoint-Specific PCR vs Read Depth and qPCR in Detecting pvmdr1 CN Variation
| Variable | Breakpoint-Specific PCR | Concordance, % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN1 | CN2+ | Fail | Total | ||
| Sequence read depth: Thailand | |||||
| CN1 | 57 (22a) | 13 (13) | 1 | 71 | … |
| CN2+ | 0 | 17 (7) | 0 | 17 | … |
| Total | 57 | 30 | 1 | 88 | 85 |
| qPCR: Thailand | |||||
| CN1 | 33 (11b) | 3 (2) | 1 | 37 | … |
| CN2+ | 1 (0) | 9 (4) | 1 | 11 | … |
| Total | 34 | 12 | 2 | 48 | 91 |
| qPCR: Indonesia | |||||
| CN1 | 25 | 0 | 2 | 27 | … |
| CN2+ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | … |
| Total | 25 | 0 | 2 | 27 | 100 |
Number of polyclonal infections as defined by microsatellite genotyping are indicated in parentheses. Genotyping was not undertaken in the Indonesian isolates.
Abbreviation: CN, copy number.
a Two isolates with genotyping failure.
b One isolate with genotyping failure.
Figure 3.Temporal trend in the prevalence of pvmdr1 amplification. Data from 2008 and 2009 were excluded owing to low sample size (1 and 4, respectively). Abbreviation: MQ, mefloquine.