AI Article Synopsis

  • Multiple alleles of kelch13 linked to artemisinin resistance in malaria are spreading in Southeast Asia, highlighting a soft selective sweep in parasite populations.
  • Research involved sequencing kelch13 and analyzing clearance rates, revealing 32 coding mutations that significantly reduce clearance, with one allele (C580Y) dominating by 2014.
  • The study indicates that the rise of ART-R allele diversity and effective population size for Plasmodium has been underestimated, emphasizing the complexity of evolutionary adaptations in malaria.

Article Abstract

Multiple kelch13 alleles conferring artemisinin resistance (ART-R) are currently spreading through Southeast Asian malaria parasite populations, providing a unique opportunity to observe an ongoing soft selective sweep, investigate why resistance alleles have evolved multiple times and determine fundamental population genetic parameters for Plasmodium We sequenced kelch13 (n = 1,876), genotyped 75 flanking SNPs, and measured clearance rate (n = 3,552) in parasite infections from Western Thailand (2001-2014). We describe 32 independent coding mutations including common mutations outside the kelch13 propeller associated with significant reductions in clearance rate. Mutations were first observed in 2003 and rose to 90% by 2014, consistent with a selection coefficient of ∼0.079. ART-R allele diversity rose until 2012 and then dropped as one allele (C580Y) spread to high frequency. The frequency with which adaptive alleles arise is determined by the rate of mutation and the population size. Two factors drive this soft sweep: (1) multiple kelch13 amino-acid mutations confer resistance providing a large mutational target-we estimate the target is 87-163 bp. (2) The population mutation parameter (Θ = 2Nμ) can be estimated from the frequency distribution of ART-R alleles and is ∼5.69, suggesting that short term effective population size is 88 thousand to 1.2 million. This is 52-705 times greater than N estimated from fluctuation in allele frequencies, suggesting that we have previously underestimated the capacity for adaptive evolution in Plasmodium Our central conclusions are that retrospective studies may underestimate the complexity of selective events and the N relevant for adaptation for malaria is considerably higher than previously estimated.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5216669PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msw228DOI Listing

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