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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2004, p. 2581-2587, Vol. 48, No. 7
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.7.2581-2587.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
E.A.3732, Parasitologie, Mycologie Médicale et Pathologie Exotique, Faculté de Médecine, Université Claude Bernard,1 Service de Parasitologie, Mycologie Médicale et Maladies Tropicales, Hôpital E. Herriot, Hospices Civils de Lyon,2 Service de Parasitologie et Maladies Tropicales, Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse, Lyon, France,7 Department of Infectious, Parasitic and Immunomediated Diseases, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy,3 Department of Pathobiology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand,4 Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Indonesia, Jakarta,5 Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ), GTZ Sis-Kes Kupang, NTT, Indonesia6
Received 23 January 2004/ Returned for modification 13 February 2004/ Accepted 5 March 2004
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The recently reported resistance to antimalarials contributes to making the control of malaria more difficult. P. vivax resistance to chloroquine was first reported in Papua New Guinea in 1989 (22) and in Indonesia in 1991 (1, 24). Other reports of clinical resistance to chloroquine have been reported in India (4, 8), Myanmar (12, 27), and areas of Central and South America, including Guyana (20) and Brazil and Colombia (25). Chloroquine still constitutes the first-line therapy for uncomplicated malaria caused by P. vivax in most areas of endemicity. The combination therapeutic strategies under consideration include 4-amino-quinolines plus other standard antimalarials, including sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (S-P). In countries where S-P was used extensively for the treatment of P. falciparum infection, such as Thailand, high-grade antifolate resistance has also emerged in P. vivax parasites (21, 30).
Molecular, clinical, and epidemiological studies have clearly shown that, as for P. falciparum, resistance to pyrimethamine results from specific point mutations in the P. vivax dhfr (dihydrofolate reductase [DHFR]) gene (pvdhfr), which lead to a reduced affinity of the drug for the DHFR enzyme (5, 6, 9-11, 13, 26, 28).
Detection of these mutations in isolates collected in the field has proved valuable in the mapping of resistance and the monitoring of malaria control measures (11).
For this purpose, through the use of a powerful method based on hybridization probe technology, we have analyzed point mutations in the pvdhfr gene using P. vivax-infected samples from Azerbaijan and Turkey, where no molecular investigation of the resistance markers of the P. vivax parasite have been conducted before; and from Thailand and Indonesia, which differ in their previous and present policies for the use of antimalarial drugs. The mutations targeted here were mapped on six P. vivax dhfr positions that have previously been suggested to be involved in S-P resistance.
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During the summer of 2000, 24 blood samples were collected from symptomatic patients consulting at the Institute of Malariology of Adana (southeastern Turkey), after informed consent was obtained from each patient, and placed in EDTA anticoagulant.
During the summer of 2002, 39 blood samples were obtained during an active survey carried out in the framework of a malaria project supported by the European Commission and placed in EDTA anticoagulant. Samples were collected in seven districts of central Azerbaijan already operating as World Health Organization sentinel sites, namely, Sabirabad (n = 4), Saatli (n = 10), Beylagan (n = 1), Aghjabadi (n = 7), Imishly (n = 3), Barda (n = 8), and Mingaçevir (n = 6).
Sixteen blood samples were collected by finger prick from adult patients visiting the Mae Sod malaria clinic, Tak Province Thailand. Whole blood was dotted on Whatman 3MM filter paper, air dried, and stored in individual plastic zip-lock bags with desiccant and away from direct light.
In June 2001, 53 blood samples were collected as blood spots from Indonesian children ages 6 to 10 years during a malariometric survey in Alor District, East Nusa Tenggara Province.
Between 2001 and 2003, 19 blood samples from patients presenting with imported vivax malaria and hospitalized in France were collected after biological confirmation by microscopic examination of thin smears and placed in EDTA anticoagulant. Those patients had contracted malaria during their travels in different areas of endemicity: French Guyana (n = 6), Comoros Islands (n = 4), Indonesia (n = 2), Madagascar (n = 2), Afghanistan (n = 1), Cameroon (n = 1), and unknown (n = 1).
Control blood samples that were noninfected or that were infected with P. falciparum, P. malariae, or P. ovale were collected from patients hospitalized in France and were used to check for the specificity of amplification.
DNA template preparation and PCR. Parasite genomic DNA from all blood samples in EDTA anticoagulant was extracted by using a QIAamp DNA blood kit (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.), according to the instructions manufacturer, with minor modifications (3). Extraction of P. vivax DNA from blood spot samples from Thailand was carried out with the QIAamp DNA blood kit and then by use of the Dried Blood Spots Protocol provided with the kit, with the same minor modifications mentioned above.
Parasite DNA from 17 Indonesian blood spots was previously isolated by using Instagene Matrix resin (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.) by the protocol described previously (3). DNA was isolated from the other 36 Indonesian samples by using the Qiagen kit. Comparison of the efficiencies of the two different DNA isolation methods, which were evaluated by using blood spots infected with P. falciparum culture-adapted strain HB3 at different levels of parasitemia (0.01, 0.02, 0.05%), has shown no difference in the threshold cycle values (data not shown).
SYBR Green I PCR amplification. The primers and probes used for the FRET assay were designed by Olfert Landt (DNA Synthesis Service, TibMolBiol, Berlin, Germany). Real-time PCR was performed by using SYBR Green I dye, which binds specifically to double-stranded DNA. The sequences of PCR primers dhfrS and dhfrA, which were used to amplify an approximately 450-bp fragment from the P. vivax dhfr gene (GenBank accession number X98123), are listed in Table 1.
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TABLE 1. Sequences of primers and oligonucleotides probes used for detection of pvdhfr mutations F57L/I, S58R, T61M, S117N/T, I172V, and I173L
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FRET assay. The oligonucleotide probes sequences used to detect six polymorphisms (F57L/I, S58R, T61M, S117N/T, I172V, and I173L) of the pvdhfr gene are listed in Table 1.
The sensor probe is designed to be perfectly complementary to the wild-type allele, and the anchor probe is designed to be perfectly complementary to conserved sequences adjacent to the mutation site (Fig. 1). The PCR mixture (20 µl) contained 5 µl of DNA template, probes (0.2 µM each), primers (0.5 µM each), MgCl2 (3 mM), and 2 µl of FastStart DNA Master Hybridization probes. The 40-cycle PCR program was performed as described above; however, a 45-cycle PCR program was used for the Indonesian isolates, due to the long-term storage of the blood samples, which were collected in 2001. Fluorescence was measured at channel F2 of the LightCycler instrument at the end of the annealing phase of each cycle.
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FIG. 1. Nucleotide sequence of the P. vivax DHFR-TS gene (GenBank accession no. X98123).
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Distribution of mutations in the pvdhfr gene. Wild-type and mutant pvdhfr alleles could rapidly be determined by comparison of the melting temperature for the alleles with the melting temperature of the reference allele obtained by the FRET assay (Table 2). The melting curves obtained for polymorphisms at positions 57/58, 117, 172/173 are shown in Fig. 2. In the same way that multiclonal P. vivax infections could be identified by the presence of two peaks simultaneously, each peak corresponded to the melting temperatures of the reference alleles. It was observed in two Thai samples and one Indonesian sample (Fig. 2D).
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TABLE 2. Melting temperatures of the sensor probes for detection of pvdhfr mutations F57L/I, S58R, T61M, S117N/T, I172V, and I173L
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FIG. 2. Genotyping of pvdhfr by melting curve analysis of 134 P. vivax-infected samples. (A) Melting temperature peaks of the alleles obtained for the F57I/L, S58R, and T61M mutations: a, wild-type alleles F57, S58, and T61; b, mutant type 1 alleles F57, S58R, and T61; c, mutant type 2 alleles F57L, S58R, and T61M; d, mutant type 3 alleles I57L, S58R, and T61M. (B) Melting peaks of the alleles for S117N/T. e, wild-type allele S117; f, mutant type 1 allele S117N; g, mutant type 2 allele S117T. (C) Melting peaks obtained for mutations I172V and I173L. h, wild-type alleles I172 and I173; i, mutant type alleles I172 and I173L. (D) Double peaks indicating the presence of both wild-type and mutant alleles simultaneously in the same sample.
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CGC) found only once at codon 49 (C
R) was excluded from the subsequent analysis since this unexpected and isolated mutation may have been generated as a result of artifacts during PCR amplification.
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FIG. 3. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of P. vivax DHFR enzymes deduced from the nucleotide sequences of the pvdhfr genes amplified from P. vivax isolates. Alignment of the sequences is based on the ARI-Pakistan sequence (GenBank accession no. X98123), considered to represent the wild-type sequence, from residues 39 to 185. Dashes represent deletions, and polymorphisms are in boldface with gray shading.
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TABLE 3. Distribution of pvdhfr mutations F57L/I, S58R, T61M, SI17N/T, I172V, and I173L among 134 human blood samples
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TAC) was observed at codon 69 in five samples. Mutations that resulted in nonsynonymous substitutions were found at five residues: 57, 58, 61, 117, and 173. The F
I change at codon 57 resulted from a TTC
ATA double mutation and was observed seven times; the second change found at this codon, F
L, due to a single mutation (TTC
TTA), was observed two times. The ACG
ATG mutation at codon 61 (which resulted in a T
M change) was observed nine times. The S
R change at position 58 resulted from a single mutation (AGC
AGA or AGG) and was observed 25 times. Two different mutations at position 117 caused an S
N (AGC
AAC) change in 48 samples or an S
T (AGC
ACC) change in 9 samples.
The I
L change at codon 173 was found in only three of six samples from French Guyana. It should be noted that the samples from infected patients in French Guyana were sent to us following repeated chloroquine treatment failure, and the samples contained mutants with double mutations at positions 58 and 117. However, data collected during the monitoring of these patients were scarce, and clinical resistance could not be assumed in these cases. No polymorphism was detected at codon 172.
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Moreover, the lack of efficient methods for in vitro and in vivo evaluations of P. vivax drug resistance increases the need for a database on the single-nucleotide polymorphisms known to be related to drug resistance.
We have conducted a retrospective study with partners in the field involved in malaria surveillance programs from western to eastern Asia. To our knowledge, no molecular investigation of the drug resistance marker for P. vivax parasites from a temperate zone of the Old World has previously been performed. In vivo tests were not available during these programs; thus, we did not evaluate the correlation between molecular markers and the resistance phenotype. The accuracy of the real-time PCR method for the detection of molecular markers in P. falciparum has been demonstrated previously (3), and the data presented here show that this method is applicable to P. vivax. This method could easily be applied to large numbers of samples (32 samples can be tested in a 1-h experiment) and is particularly adapted to large-scale studies of drug resistance.
All 134 samples analyzed could be classified into five different groups according to the mutation profiles of the isolates in the samples (Table 4). Approximately half (57.5%) of the samples tested here contained isolates that presented the wild-type genotype, and isolates with a single mutation (S117N) were observed in about a quarter (23.9%) of the samples tested.
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TABLE 4. Different pvdhfr single- and multiple-nucleotide polymorphisms found in the areas of endemicity analyzed
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As is the case for the homologous position 108 in the dhfr gene of P. falciparum, we may hypothesize that the S117N mutation could represent the first step in the drug resistance selection process that has occurred in the parasite.
The isolates in all but two samples from Indonesia were of the wild type. Interestingly, an efficacy study with P. falciparum conducted in the same area (Alor Island) showed only a 10% rate of S-P treatment failure and did not demonstrate any dhps mutations.
The isolates in samples from travelers infected in French Guyana had double mutations (S58R and S117N) or triple mutations (S58R, S117N, and I173L). This is in agreement with the suspected frequency of treatment failure in this area, but the relationship of treatment failure to the use of antifolate drugs is speculative. The I173L mutation was observed only in isolates from samples from French Guyana and not in isolates from other samples. This could be related to data concerning the geographic subdivision of P. vivax between the Old World and the New World (14).
Analysis of field isolates from Thailand, where S-P has been extensively used in the past, revealed the predominance (100%) of parasites harboring three pvdhfr mutant alleles: S58R and S117N; F57L, S58R, T61M, and S117T; and F57I, S58R, T61M, and S117T.
This is in agreement with the findings of a recent study (19) in which high levels of P. vivax resistance in vivo were associated with the presence of double and triple mutations in pvdhfr (positions 57, 58, and 117) in 99% of the isolates tested.
If the spread of chloroquine resistance encourages health care policy makers to move toward antifolate drug regimens as first-line treatments, such data offer a snapshot of the prevalence of pvdhfr mutations in multiple geographical areas and can provide crucial information on the potential appearance of S-P resistance in these areas.
This study was partially supported by a grant from the European Commission (Copernicus-2 RTD project contract ICA2-CT-2000-10046) and a grant from the French Ministry of Research (Program PAL+).
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