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Lineage-informative microhaplotypes for spatio-temporal surveillance of Plasmodium vivax malaria parasites.

Authors :
Siegel SV
Amato R
Trimarsanto H
Sutanto E
Kleinecke M
Murie K
Whitton G
Taylor AR
Watson JA
Imwong M
Assefa A
Rahim AG
Chau NH
Hien TT
Green JA
Koh G
White NJ
Day N
Kwiatkowski DP
Rayner JC
Price RN
Auburn S
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2023 Mar 16. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Mar 16.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Challenges in understanding the origin of recurrent Plasmodium vivax infections constrains the surveillance of antimalarial efficacy and transmission of this neglected parasite. Recurrent infections within an individual may arise from activation of dormant liver stages (relapse), blood-stage treatment failure (recrudescence) or new inoculations (reinfection). Molecular inference of familial relatedness (identity-by-descent or IBD) based on whole genome sequence data, together with analysis of the intervals between parasitaemic episodes ("time-to-event" analysis), can help resolve the probable origin of recurrences. Whole genome sequencing of predominantly low-density P. vivax infections is challenging, so an accurate and scalable genotyping method to determine the origins of recurrent parasitaemia would be of significant benefit. We have developed a P. vivax genome-wide informatics pipeline to select specific microhaplotype panels that can capture IBD within small, amplifiable segments of the genome. Using a global set of 615 P. vivax genomes, we derived a panel of 100 microhaplotypes, each comprising 3-10 high frequency SNPs within <200 bp sequence windows. This panel exhibits high diversity in regions of the Asia-Pacific, Latin America and the horn of Africa (median H <subscript>E</subscript> = 0.70-0.81) and it captured 89% (273/307) of the polyclonal infections detected with genome-wide datasets. Using data simulations, we demonstrate lower error in estimating pairwise IBD using microhaplotypes, relative to traditional biallelic SNP barcodes. Our panel exhibited high accuracy in predicting the country of origin (median Matthew's correlation coefficient >0.9 in 90% countries tested) and it also captured local infection outbreak and bottlenecking events. The informatics pipeline is available open-source and yields microhaplotypes that can be readily transferred to high-throughput amplicon sequencing assays for surveillance in malaria-endemic regions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
36993192
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.13.23287179