Department of Parasitology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Infectious Disease and Microbiome Program, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2020 Oct 28;14(10):e0008808. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008808. eCollection 2020 Oct.
Plasmodium vivax is a neglected human malaria parasite that causes significant morbidity in the Americas, the Middle East, Asia, and the Western Pacific. Population genomic approaches remain little explored to map local and regional transmission pathways of P. vivax across the main endemic sites in the Americas, where great progress has been made towards malaria elimination over the past decades.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analyze 38 patient-derived P. vivax genome sequences from Mâncio Lima (ML)-the Amazonian malaria hotspot next to the Brazil-Peru border-and 24 sequences from two other sites in Acre State, Brazil, a country that contributes 23% of malaria cases in the Americas. We show that the P. vivax population of ML is genetically diverse (π = 4.7 × 10-4), with a high polymorphism particularly in genes encoding proteins putatively involved in red blood cell invasion. Paradoxically, however, parasites display strong genome-wide linkage disequilibrium, being fragmented into discrete lineages that are remarkably stable across time and space, with only occasional recombination between them. Using identity-by-descent approaches, we identified a large cluster of closely related sequences that comprises 16 of 38 genomes sampled in ML over 26 months. Importantly, we found significant ancestry sharing between parasites at a large geographic distance, consistent with substantial gene flow between regional P. vivax populations.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We have characterized the sustained expansion of highly inbred P. vivax lineages in a malaria hotspot that can seed regional transmission. Potential source populations in hotspots represent a priority target for malaria elimination in the Amazon.
间日疟原虫是一种被忽视的人类疟原虫,它在美洲、中东、亚洲和西太平洋地区造成了严重的发病率。人群基因组方法在绘制间日疟原虫在美洲主要流行地区的局部和区域传播途径方面仍鲜有探索,尽管在过去几十年中,这些地区在消除疟疾方面取得了重大进展。
方法/主要发现:我们分析了来自亚马逊疟疾热点地区曼西尼奥利马(ML)的 38 个源自患者的间日疟原虫基因组序列,以及巴西阿克里州另外两个地点的 24 个序列,巴西贡献了美洲 23%的疟疾病例。我们表明,ML 的间日疟原虫种群具有遗传多样性(π=4.7×10-4),尤其是在编码可能参与红细胞入侵的蛋白质的基因中具有高度多态性。然而,矛盾的是,寄生虫表现出强烈的全基因组连锁不平衡,被分割成离散的谱系,这些谱系在时间和空间上都非常稳定,只有偶尔在它们之间发生重组。使用亲缘关系分析方法,我们在 26 个月内在 ML 中采样的 38 个基因组中鉴定出了一个包含 16 个密切相关序列的大聚类。重要的是,我们发现了在大地理距离上寄生虫之间存在显著的祖先共享,这与区域间间日疟原虫种群之间的大量基因流动是一致的。
结论/意义:我们已经描述了在一个可以引发区域传播的疟疾热点地区持续扩张的高度近亲繁殖的间日疟原虫谱系。热点地区的潜在源种群是在亚马逊地区消除疟疾的优先目标。