AI Article Synopsis

  • Soil-transmitted nematodes, particularly hookworms, infect over a billion people globally, causing serious health issues like iron-deficiency anemia, especially in vulnerable groups such as children and pregnant women.
  • Current treatment involves single doses of benzimidazole, but rapid re-infection and rising drug resistance threaten effective control.
  • Researchers have identified the first naturally occurring multidrug-resistant strain of the canine hookworm, which is resistant to fenbendazole and ivermectin, highlighting the urgent need to understand resistance mechanisms for future treatment strategies.

Article Abstract

Soil-transmitted nematodes infect over a billion people and place several billion more at risk of infection. Hookworm disease is the most significant of these soil-transmitted nematodes, with over 500 million people infected. Hookworm infection can result in debilitating and sometimes fatal iron-deficiency anemia, which is particularly devastating in children and pregnant women. Currently, hookworms and other soil-transmitted nematodes are controlled by administration of a single dose of a benzimidazole to targeted populations in endemic areas. While effective, people are quickly re-infected, necessitating frequent treatment. Widespread exposure to anthelmintic drugs can place significant selective pressure on parasitic nematodes to generate resistance, which has severely compromised benzimidazole anthelmintics for control of livestock nematodes in many areas of the world. Here we report, to our knowledge, the first naturally occurring multidrug-resistant strain of the canine hookworm Ancylostoma caninum. We reveal that this isolate is resistant to fenbendazole at the clinical dosage of 50 mg/kg for 3 days. Our data shows that this strain harbors a fixed, single base pair mutation at amino acid 167 of the β-tubulin isotype 1 gene, and by using CRISPR/Cas9 we demonstrate that introduction of this mutation into the corresponding amino acid in the orthologous β-tubulin gene of Caenorhabditis elegans confers a similar level of resistance to thiabendazole. We also show that the isolate is resistant to the macrocyclic lactone anthelmintic ivermectin. Understanding the mechanism of anthelmintic resistance is important for rational design of control strategies to maintain the usefulness of current drugs, and to monitor the emergence of resistance. The isolate we describe represents the first multidrug-resistant strain of A. caninum reported, and our data reveal a resistance marker that can emerge naturally in response to heavy anthelminthic treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6456372PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2018.12.004DOI Listing

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