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Stepwise acquisition of pyrimethamine resistance in the malaria parasite
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Metadata
Document Title
Stepwise acquisition of pyrimethamine resistance in the malaria parasite
Author
Lozovsky ER, Chookajorn T, Brown KM, Imwong M, Shaw PJ, Kamchonwongpaisan S, Neafsey DE, Weinreich DM, Hartl DL
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Harvard University; Mahidol University; Mahidol University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); Harvard University; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Broad Institute; Brown University
Type
Article
Source Title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Year
2009
Volume
106
Issue
29
Page
12025-12030
Open Access
Green Published, Green Submitted, Bronze
Publisher
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI
10.1073/pnas.0905922106
Format
Abstract
The spread of high-level pyrimethamine resistance in Africa threatens to curtail the therapeutic lifetime of antifolate antimalarials. We studied the possible evolutionary pathways in the evolution of pyrimethamine resistance using an approach in which all possible mutational intermediates were created by site-directed mutagenesis and assayed for their level of drug resistance. The coding sequence for dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) from the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum was mutagenized, and tests were carried out in Escherichia coli under conditions in which the endogenous bacterial enzyme was selectively inhibited. We studied 4 key amino acid replacements implicated in pyrimethamine resistance: N51I, C59R, S108N, and I164L. Using empirical estimates of the mutational spectrum in P. falciparum and probabilities of fixation based on the relative levels of resistance, we found that the predicted favored pathways of drug resistance are consistent with those reported in previous kinetic studies, as well as DHFR polymorphisms observed in natural populations. We found that 3 pathways account for nearly 90% of the simulated realizations of the evolution of pyrimethamine resistance. The most frequent pathway (S108N and then C59R, N51I, and I164L) accounts for more than half of the simulated realizations. Our results also suggest an explanation for why I164L is detected in Southeast Asia and South America, but not at significant frequencies in Africa.
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Funding Sponsor
National Institues of Health [R01GM079536]; Thailand Research Fund [MRG5080418]; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [R01GM079536] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
Publication Source
WOS