Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Apr 23;110(17):7020-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1305201110. Epub 2013 Apr 8.
Wild-living chimpanzees and gorillas harbor a multitude of Plasmodium species, including six of the subgenus Laverania, one of which served as the progenitor of Plasmodium falciparum. Despite the magnitude of this reservoir, it is unknown whether apes represent a source of human infections. Here, we used Plasmodium species-specific PCR, single-genome amplification, and 454 sequencing to screen humans from remote areas of southern Cameroon for ape Laverania infections. Among 1,402 blood samples, we found 1,000 to be Plasmodium mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) positive, all of which contained human parasites as determined by sequencing and/or restriction enzyme digestion. To exclude low-abundance infections, we subjected 514 of these samples to 454 sequencing, targeting a region of the mtDNA genome that distinguishes ape from human Laverania species. Using algorithms specifically developed to differentiate rare Plasmodium variants from 454-sequencing error, we identified single and mixed-species infections with P. falciparum, Plasmodium malariae, and/or Plasmodium ovale. However, none of the human samples contained ape Laverania parasites, including the gorilla precursor of P. falciparum. To characterize further the diversity of P. falciparum in Cameroon, we used single-genome amplification to amplify 3.4-kb mtDNA fragments from 229 infected humans. Phylogenetic analysis identified 62 new variants, all of which clustered with extant P. falciparum, providing further evidence that P. falciparum emerged following a single gorilla-to-human transmission. Thus, unlike Plasmodium knowlesi-infected macaques in southeast Asia, African apes harboring Laverania parasites do not seem to serve as a recurrent source of human malaria, a finding of import to ongoing control and eradication measures.
野生生活的黑猩猩和大猩猩携带多种疟原虫物种,包括六个属于拉弗拉尼亚亚属的物种,其中一个是恶性疟原虫的祖源。尽管这个储库很大,但尚不清楚猿是否是人类感染的来源。在这里,我们使用疟原虫种特异性 PCR、单基因组扩增和 454 测序来筛选喀麦隆南部偏远地区的人类是否感染了猿类的拉弗拉尼亚疟原虫。在 1402 份血液样本中,我们发现有 1000 份为疟原虫线粒体 DNA(mtDNA)阳性,所有这些样本均通过测序和/或限制性内切酶消化确定含有人类寄生虫。为了排除低丰度感染,我们对其中的 514 份样本进行了 454 测序,目标是 mtDNA 基因组的一个区域,该区域可区分猿类和人类的拉弗拉尼亚物种。我们使用专门开发的算法来区分来自 454 测序误差的罕见疟原虫变体,鉴定了感染恶性疟原虫、间日疟原虫和/或卵形疟原虫的单种和混合种感染。然而,没有一份人类样本含有猿类的拉弗拉尼亚寄生虫,包括恶性疟原虫的大猩猩前体。为了进一步描述喀麦隆恶性疟原虫的多样性,我们使用单基因组扩增从 229 名感染的人类中扩增了 3.4kb 的 mtDNA 片段。系统发育分析鉴定了 62 个新的变体,所有这些变体都与现有的恶性疟原虫聚类,进一步证明恶性疟原虫是在一次从大猩猩到人类的传播后出现的。因此,与东南亚感染间日疟原虫的猕猴不同,携带拉弗拉尼亚寄生虫的非洲猿似乎不是人类疟疾的反复来源,这一发现对正在进行的控制和根除措施具有重要意义。