| Literature DB >> 35346342 |
Marcus Vinicius Niz Alvarez1, Diego Peres Alonso1, Samir Moura Kadri1, Paulo Rufalco-Moutinho2, Isabella Ariadne Ferrari Bernardes1, Ana Carolina Florindo de Mello1, Ana Carolina Souto1, Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar3,4, Marta Moreno3,5, Dionicia Gamboa3,6,7, Joseph M Vinetz3,7,8, Jan E Conn9,10, Paulo E M Ribolla11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Brazil, malaria is concentrated in the Amazon Basin, where more than 99% of the annual cases are reported. The main goal of this study was to investigate the population structure and genetic association of the biting behavior of Nyssorhynchus (also known as Anopheles) darlingi, the major malaria vector in the Amazon region of Brazil, using low-coverage genomic sequencing data.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35346342 PMCID: PMC8961893 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-022-05219-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Nyssorhynchus darlingi collection sites in Mâncio, Lima city, Acre State, Brazil and in the Salvador community on the Napo River, Iquitos city, Loreto, Peru. A–D represent the collection sites: A 7°37′12.9″S, 72°53′06.7″W; B 7°38′02.1"S, 72°52′26.5"W; C 7°39′05.3″S, 72°53′20.9″W; D 3°44′17.1″S 73°14′19.9″W. The schematic representation of respective sites shows the houses where adults were captured (red dots), all breeding sites analyzed within approximately 1 km of each house (blue), forest areas (green) and the main roads (black lines)
Nyssorhynchus darlingi samples identified with BLASTn and COI (e-value < 1e-100)
| Stage | Collection pointsa | Locationb | Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult | A | Indoor | 12 |
| Outdoor | 35 | ||
| Adult | B | Indoor | 7 |
| Outdoor | 15 | ||
| Adult | C | Indoor | 40 |
| Outdoor | 93 | ||
| Larvae | A | BS 1 | 9 |
| BS 2 | 14 | ||
| BS 3 | 10 | ||
| BS 4 | 15 | ||
| Larvae | B | BS 1 | 4 |
| BS 2 | 10 | ||
| BS 3 | 11 | ||
| BS 4 | 13 | ||
| Larvae | C | BS 1 | 7 |
| BS 2 | 13 | ||
| BS 3 | 8 | ||
| BS 4 | 5 | ||
| Larvae | D | BS 1 | 39 |
aMâncio Lima samples were collected at collection sites A (7°37'12.9"S, 72°53'06.7"W), B (7°38'02.1"S, 72°52'26.5"W) and C (7°39'05.3"S, 72°53'20.9"W). Peruvian larvae samples were collected at collection site D (3°23'47.0"S, 73°12'18.2"W)
bAdult females were collected indoor or outdoor on each collection point. Larvae were collected around four different breeding sites (BS; 1–4)) within and around each collection point
Fig. 2Estimated LD decay. Black dashed vertical line represents the estimated distance (in kbp) for r2 ≤ 0.1. Black dashed horizontal line represents mean r2 = 0.1. Black error bars represent the mean standard error. Green dashed line describes the estimated LD decay (nonlinear regression). Abbreviations: LD linkage disequilibrium
Mean F values obtained in pairwise comparisons
| Dataset | Group Ia | Group IIa | NM | Geno | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IMPUT (imputed after pruning data) | C | B | 123,620 | 188 (84.7) | 0.0009 | |
| C | A | 123,620 | 220(84.6) | 0.0012 | ||
| A | B | 123,620 | 130 (84.0) | 0.0015 | ||
| Outdoor | Indoor | 123,620 | 170 (84.5) | 0.0005 | 9.4 × 10-2 | |
| Dusk | Dawn | 123,620 | 107 (84.5) | 0.0005 | 1.2 × 10-1 | |
| RAW (non-imputed data) | C | B | 15,629 | 92 (34.5) | 0.0008 | |
| C | A | 15,629 | 86 (33.2) | 0.0005 | ||
| A | B | 15,629 | 50 (32.5) | 0.0027 | ||
| Outdoor | Indoor | 15,629 | 67(33.5) | 0.0001 | 3.1 × 10-1 | |
| Dusk | Dawn | 15,629 | 43(33.5) | 0.0001 | 3.4 × 10-1 | |
| C | D | 154,813 | 51 (14.2) | 0.0420 |
Bold values indicate statistically significant p values (p < 0.05)
F, Fixation index; N, number of single nucleotide polymorphisms used; Geno, average of non-missing genotypes per marker (% of total markers)
aA, B and C: Locations from Mâncio Lima, Acre at which samples were collected. D: sample location from Loreto, Peru
Fig. 3The left image shows the principal component analysis and k-means clustering analysis. The right images show the optimal k for k-means analysis (top right) and SNP F histogram for the statistically significant microgeographic informative SNPs (bottom right). For the optimal k plot, the blue line with dots represents the TWSS for the k-th value (left axis) and the red bars represent the difference (in percentage) between the TWSS for the k-th value and (k - 1)-th value (right axis). Abbreviations: SNP, Single nucleotide; TWSS, total within sum of squares polymorphism
Fig. 4Results for the genome-wide association study on biting behavior (outdoor vs indoor) and blood-seeking (dusk vs dawn). Dashed lines represent false discovery rate-corrected P-value threshold of 0.05. Highlighted colors represent the scaffolds containing significantly associated SNPs. Labels represent genes located < 10 kb apart from the significant SNPs
List of statistically significant markers (PFDR < 0.05) and adjacent genes in genome-wide association study for biting behavior and blood-seeking at dusk or dawn
| Scaffold | Position | Reference allele | Alternative allele | List of adjacent genesa | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADMH02000641 | 85279 | C | T | FMRFamide receptor [81054:82517]; cytochrome P450 CYP4H14 [87272:89456]; DNA-J [91017:92150] | 6.23 × 10–4 |
| ADMH02000641 | 86788 | C | A | FMRFamide receptor [81054:82517]; cytochrome P450 CYP4H14 [87272:89456]; DNA-J [91017:92150] | 1.03 × 10–2 |
| ADMH02001329 | 14688 | T | C | period circadian protein [8167:14819]; 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase [6298:7671] | 1.03 × 10–2 |
| ADMH02002006 | 31454 | G | C | 1.64 × 10–2 | |
| ADMH02000323 | 77474 | G | A | – | 3.37 × 10–2 |
| ADMH02001945 | 12409 | G | A | 3.37 × 10–2 | |
| ADMH02000929 | 14323 | G | A | retinal degeneration C protein [15781:45295] | 3.76 × 10–2 |
PFDR, False discovery rate-corrected P-value (Benjamini–Hochberg procedure)
aAdjacent genes located in a maximum range of 10 kb, 5 kb upstream and downstream, are described. Gene start and end positions are represented as follows: [start: end]