BioISI-Biosystems and Integrative Sciences Institute, Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.
Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2021 Jun 17;65(7):e0027521. doi: 10.1128/AAC.00275-21.
Malaria remains one of the deadliest diseases in Africa, particularly for children. While successful in reducing morbidity and mortality, antimalarial treatments are also a major cause of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). Host genetic variation in genes involved in drug disposition or toxicity constitutes an important determinant of ADR risk and can prime for parasite drug resistance. Importantly, however, the genetic diversity in Africa is substantial, and thus, genetic profiles in one population cannot be reliably extrapolated to other ethnogeographic groups. Gabon is considered a high-transmission country, with more than 460,000 malaria cases per year. Yet the pharmacogenetic landscape of the Gabonese population or its neighboring countries has not been analyzed. Using targeted sequencing, here, we profiled 21 pharmacogenes with importance for antimalarial treatment in 48 Gabonese pediatric patients with severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Overall, we identified 347 genetic variants, of which 18 were novel, and each individual was found to carry 87.3 ± 9.2 (standard deviation [SD]) variants across all analyzed genes. Importantly, 16.7% of these variants were population specific, highlighting the need for high-resolution pharmacogenomic profiling. Between one in three and one in six individuals harbored reduced-activity alleles of , , , and with important implications for artemisinin, chloroquine, and amodiaquine therapy. Furthermore, one in three patients harbored at least one -deficient allele, suggesting a considerably increased risk of hemolytic anemia upon exposure to aminoquinolines. Combined, our results reveal the unique genetic landscape of the Gabonese population and pinpoint the genetic basis for interindividual differences in antimalarial drug responses and toxicity.
疟疾仍然是非洲最致命的疾病之一,尤其是对儿童而言。抗疟治疗虽然成功降低了发病率和死亡率,但也是不良药物反应 (ADR) 的主要原因。药物处置或毒性相关基因中的宿主遗传变异是 ADR 风险的重要决定因素,并可能导致寄生虫对药物产生耐药性。然而,重要的是,非洲的遗传多样性很大,因此,一个人群的遗传谱不能可靠地推断到其他民族地理群体。加蓬被认为是疟疾高传播国家,每年有超过 46 万例疟疾病例。然而,加蓬人口或其邻国的药物遗传学特征尚未得到分析。在这里,我们使用靶向测序,对 48 名患有严重恶性疟原虫疟疾的加蓬儿科患者的 21 个与抗疟治疗相关的药物基因进行了基因分型。总的来说,我们鉴定了 347 种遗传变异,其中 18 种是新的,每个个体在所有分析的基因中携带 87.3 ± 9.2 个(标准差 [SD])变异。重要的是,这些变异中有 16.7%是特定于人群的,这突显了进行高分辨率药物基因组学分析的必要性。每三到六个个体中就有一个携带 、 、 或 的活性降低等位基因,这对青蒿素、氯喹和阿莫地喹治疗有重要影响。此外,每三个患者中就有一个至少携带一个 - 缺陷等位基因,这表明在接触氨基喹啉类药物时,发生溶血性贫血的风险大大增加。综合来看,我们的研究结果揭示了加蓬人群独特的遗传特征,并确定了个体间抗疟药物反应和毒性差异的遗传基础。