| Literature DB >> 30170596 |
Gustavo Fontecha1, Rosa E Mejía2, Engels Banegas3, Maria Paz Ade4, Lisandro Mendoza5, Bryan Ortiz5, Isaac Sabillón5, Gerardo Alvarado5, Gabriela Matamoros5, Alejandra Pinto5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains a public health problem in some countries of Central America. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are one of the most useful tools to assist in the diagnosis of malaria in remote areas. Since its introduction, a wide variety of RDTs have been developed for the detection of different parasite antigens. PfHRP2 is the most targeted antigen for the detection of Plasmodium falciparum infections. Genetic mutations and gene deletions are important factors influencing or affecting the performance of rapid diagnostic tests.Entities:
Keywords: Central America; Malaria; Plasmodium falciparum; RDT; pfhrp2; pfhrp3
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30170596 PMCID: PMC6119307 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2470-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Proportion of deletions in pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 genes and flanking regions in Plasmodium falciparum isolates from Central America (CAM). The pie charts illustrate the proportion of parasite isolates with or without deletions by country: Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. The departments where the samples were collected are coloured in yellow
Fig. 2Scheme of the pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 genes and their flanking sequences. The black arrows indicate the names and targets of the primers used to amplify each region, as well as the size of the amplicons. The parasite strain used for the in silico analysis was 3D7 (GenBank Accession Number: AL844507.3)
Primer sequences and amplification conditions of pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 genes, and their respective flanking sequences
| Target sequence | Reaction | Primer | Primer sequence | Annealing temp (°C) | Amplicon size (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pfhrp2 UPSTREAM PF3D7_0831900, (MAL7P1.230) | Primary | 230F1 | 5′GATATCATTAGAAAACAAGAGCTTAG3′ | 63 | 301 |
| 230R | 5′TATCCAATCCTTCCTTTGCAACACC3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | 230F | 5′TATGAACGCAATTTAAGTGAGGCAG3′ | 65 | ||
| 230R | 5′TATCCAATCCTTCCTTTGCAACACC3′ | ||||
| pfhrp2 Exon 1–2, PF3D7_0831800 | Primary | 2E12F1 | 5′GGTTTCCTTCTCAAAAAATAAAG3′ | 55 | 228 |
| 2E12R1 | 5′TCTACATGTGCTTGAGTTTCG3′ | ||||
| Nested | 2E12F | 5′GTATTATCCGCTGCCGTTTTTGCC3′ | 62 | ||
| 2E12R | 5′CTACACAAGTTATTATTAAATGCGGAA3′ | ||||
| pfhrp2 DOWNSTREAM PF3D7_0831700, (MAL7P1.228) | Primary | 228F | 5′AGACAAGCTACCAAAGATGCAGGTG3′ | 60 | 198 |
| 228R | 5′TAAATGTGTATCTCCTGAGGTAGC3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | 228F1 | 5′CCATTGCTGGTTTAAATGTTTTAAG3′ | 63 | ||
| 228R | 5′TAAATGTGTATCTCCTGAGGTAGC3′ | ||||
| pfhrp3 DOWNSTREAM PF3D7_1372100, (MAL13P1.485) | Primary | 485F | 5′TTGAGTGCAATGATGAGTGGAG3′ | 60 | 241 |
| 485R | 5′AAATCATTTCCTTTTACACTAGTGC3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | 485F1 | 5′GTTACTACATTAGTGATGCATTC3′ | 59 | ||
| 485R | 5′AAATCATTTCCTTTTACACTAGTGC3′ | ||||
| pfhrp3 Exon 1–2, PF3D7_1372200 | Primary | 3E12F1 | 5′GGTTTCCTTCTCAAAAAATAAAA3′ | 53 | 225 |
| 3E12R1 | 5′CCTGCATGTGCTTGACTTTA3′ | ||||
| Nested | 3E12F | 5′ATATTATCGCTGCCGTTTTTGCT3′ | 62 | ||
| 3E12R | 5′CTAAACAAGTTATTGTTAAATTCGGAG3′ | ||||
| pfhrp3 UPSTREAM PF3D7_1372400, (MAL13P1.475) | Primary | 475F | 5′TTCATGAGTAGATGTCCTAGGAG3′ | 55 | 212 |
| 475R | 5′TCGTACAATTCATCATACTCACC3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | 475F | 5′TTCATGAGTAGATGTCCTAGGAG3′ | 61 | ||
| 475R1 | 5′GGATGTTTCGACATTTTCGTCG3′ | ||||
| pfhrp2 Exon 2 | Primary | Pfhrp2F1 | 5′CAAAAGGACTTAATTTAAATAAGAG3′ | 55 | 600–950 |
| Pfhrp2R1 | 5′AATAAATTTAATGGCGTAGGCA3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | Pfhrp2F2 | 5′ATTATTACACGAAACTCAAGCAC3′ | 55 | ||
| Pfhrp2R1 | 5′AATAAATTTAATGGCGTAGGCA3′ | ||||
| pfhrp3 Exon 2 | Primary | Pfhrp3F1 | 5′AATGCAAAAGGACTTAATTC3′ | 55 | 600–950 |
| Pfhrp3R1 | 5′TGGTGTAAGTGATGCGTAGT3′ | ||||
| Semi-nested | Pfhrp3F2 | 5′AAATAAGAGATTATTACACGAAAG3′ | 55 | ||
| Pfhrp3R1 | 5′TGGTGTAAGTGATGCGTAGT3′ |
Number and percentages of samples showing deletions of the pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 partial sequences (exon 1–2) by country and year of collection
| Country | Year of collection | Exon 1–2 pfhrp2+ | Exon 1–2 pfhrp2− | Exon 1–2 pfhrp3+ | Exon 1–2 pfhrp3− | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guatemala | 2015 | 18 (85.7%) | 3 (14.3%) | 2 (9.5%) | 19 (90.5%) | 21 (16.4%) |
| Nicaragua | 2015 | 38 (69.1%) | 17 (30.9%) | 7 (12.7%) | 48 (87.3%) | 55 (43%) |
| Honduras | 2011 | 6 (60%) | 4 (40%) | – | 10 (100%) | 10 (7.8%) |
| Honduras | 2012 | 11 (100%) | – | 2 (18.2%) | 9 (81.8%) | 11 (8.6%) |
| Honduras | 2017 | 22 (71%) | 9 (29%) | – | 31 (100%) | 31 (24.2%) |
| Total | 95 (74.2%) | 33 (25.8%) | 11 (8.6%) | 117 (91.4%) | 128 (100%) |
Number and percentages of samples showing deletions of the pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 genes and their flanking regions by country
| MAL7P1.230 | pfhrp2 Exon 1–2 | MAL7P1.228 | Guatemala, n (%) | Nicaragua, n (%) | Honduras, n (%) | Total, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| + | + | + | 12 (57.1) | 30 (54.5) | 33 (63.5) | 75 (58.6) |
| − | + | + | 6 (28.6) | 8 (14.5) | 6 (11.5) | 20 (15.6) |
| + | − | + | – | 14 (25.4) | 7 (13.5) | 21 (16.4) |
| − | − | + | 3 (14.3) | 3 (5.5) | 5 (9.6) | 11 (8.6) |
| + | − | − | – | – | 1 (1.9) | 1 (0.8) |
| Total | 21 (100) | 55 (100) | 52 (100) | 128 |
Number and percentages of samples showing deletions of pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 sequences (exon 1–2 and exon 2) by country
| Exon 1–2 pfhrp2 | Exon 2 pfhrp2 | Exon 1–2 pfhrp3 | Exon 2 pfhrp3 | Guatemala, n (%) | Nicaragua, n (%) | Honduras, n (%) | Total, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| − | − | − | − | 3 (11.1) | 2 (7.4) | 3 (11.1) | 8 (29.6) |
| − | − | − | + | 0 | 1 (3.7) | 1 (3.7) | 2 (7.4) |
| − | + | − | + | 0 | 6 (22.2) | 6 (22.2) | 12 (44.4) |
| − | + | − | + | 0 | 2 (7.4) | 3 (11.1) | 5 (18.5) |
| 3 (11.1) | 11 (40.7) | 13 (48.1) | 27 (100) |