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Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites

BACKGROUND: The 200 kDa merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) of malaria parasites, a strong vaccine candidate, plays a key role during erythrocyte invasion and is a target of host protective immune response. Plasmodium vivax, the most widespread human malaria parasite, is closely related to parasites...

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Autores principales: Sawai, Hiromi, Otani, Hiroto, Arisue, Nobuko, Palacpac, Nirianne, de Oliveira Martins, Leonardo, Pathirana, Sisira, Handunnetti, Shiroma, Kawai, Satoru, Kishino, Hirohisa, Horii, Toshihiro, Tanabe, Kazuyuki
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2832629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20167126
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-52
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author Sawai, Hiromi
Otani, Hiroto
Arisue, Nobuko
Palacpac, Nirianne
de Oliveira Martins, Leonardo
Pathirana, Sisira
Handunnetti, Shiroma
Kawai, Satoru
Kishino, Hirohisa
Horii, Toshihiro
Tanabe, Kazuyuki
author_facet Sawai, Hiromi
Otani, Hiroto
Arisue, Nobuko
Palacpac, Nirianne
de Oliveira Martins, Leonardo
Pathirana, Sisira
Handunnetti, Shiroma
Kawai, Satoru
Kishino, Hirohisa
Horii, Toshihiro
Tanabe, Kazuyuki
author_sort Sawai, Hiromi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The 200 kDa merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) of malaria parasites, a strong vaccine candidate, plays a key role during erythrocyte invasion and is a target of host protective immune response. Plasmodium vivax, the most widespread human malaria parasite, is closely related to parasites that infect Asian Old World monkeys, and has been considered to have become a parasite of man by host switch from a macaque malaria parasite. Several Asian monkey parasites have a range of natural hosts. The same parasite species shows different disease manifestations among host species. This suggests that host immune responses to P. vivax-related malaria parasites greatly differ among host species (albeit other factors). It is thus tempting to invoke that a major immune target parasite protein such as MSP-1 underwent unique evolution, depending on parasite species that exhibit difference in host range and host specificity. RESULTS: We performed comparative phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of the gene encoding MSP-1 (msp1) from P. vivax and nine P. vivax-related simian malaria parasites. The inferred phylogenetic tree of msp1 significantly differed from that of the mitochondrial genome, with a striking displacement of P. vivax from a position close to P. cynomolgi in the mitochondrial genome tree to an outlier of Asian monkey parasites. Importantly, positive selection was inferred for two ancestral branches, one leading to P. inui and P. hylobati and the other leading to P. vivax, P. fieldi and P. cynomolgi. This ancestral positive selection was estimated to have occurred three to six million years ago, coinciding with the period of radiation of Asian macaques. Comparisons of msp1 polymorphisms between P. vivax, P. inui and P. cynomolgi revealed that while some positively selected amino acid sites or regions are shared by these parasites, amino acid changes greatly differ, suggesting that diversifying selection is acting species-specifically on msp1. CONCLUSIONS: The present results indicate that the msp1 locus of P. vivax and related parasite species has lineage-specific unique evolutionary history with positive selection. P. vivax and related simian malaria parasites offer an interesting system toward understanding host species-dependent adaptive evolution of immune-target surface antigen genes such as msp1.
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spelling pubmed-28326292010-03-05 Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites Sawai, Hiromi Otani, Hiroto Arisue, Nobuko Palacpac, Nirianne de Oliveira Martins, Leonardo Pathirana, Sisira Handunnetti, Shiroma Kawai, Satoru Kishino, Hirohisa Horii, Toshihiro Tanabe, Kazuyuki BMC Evol Biol Research article BACKGROUND: The 200 kDa merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) of malaria parasites, a strong vaccine candidate, plays a key role during erythrocyte invasion and is a target of host protective immune response. Plasmodium vivax, the most widespread human malaria parasite, is closely related to parasites that infect Asian Old World monkeys, and has been considered to have become a parasite of man by host switch from a macaque malaria parasite. Several Asian monkey parasites have a range of natural hosts. The same parasite species shows different disease manifestations among host species. This suggests that host immune responses to P. vivax-related malaria parasites greatly differ among host species (albeit other factors). It is thus tempting to invoke that a major immune target parasite protein such as MSP-1 underwent unique evolution, depending on parasite species that exhibit difference in host range and host specificity. RESULTS: We performed comparative phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of the gene encoding MSP-1 (msp1) from P. vivax and nine P. vivax-related simian malaria parasites. The inferred phylogenetic tree of msp1 significantly differed from that of the mitochondrial genome, with a striking displacement of P. vivax from a position close to P. cynomolgi in the mitochondrial genome tree to an outlier of Asian monkey parasites. Importantly, positive selection was inferred for two ancestral branches, one leading to P. inui and P. hylobati and the other leading to P. vivax, P. fieldi and P. cynomolgi. This ancestral positive selection was estimated to have occurred three to six million years ago, coinciding with the period of radiation of Asian macaques. Comparisons of msp1 polymorphisms between P. vivax, P. inui and P. cynomolgi revealed that while some positively selected amino acid sites or regions are shared by these parasites, amino acid changes greatly differ, suggesting that diversifying selection is acting species-specifically on msp1. CONCLUSIONS: The present results indicate that the msp1 locus of P. vivax and related parasite species has lineage-specific unique evolutionary history with positive selection. P. vivax and related simian malaria parasites offer an interesting system toward understanding host species-dependent adaptive evolution of immune-target surface antigen genes such as msp1. BioMed Central 2010-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2832629/ /pubmed/20167126 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-52 Text en Copyright ©2010 Sawai et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Sawai, Hiromi
Otani, Hiroto
Arisue, Nobuko
Palacpac, Nirianne
de Oliveira Martins, Leonardo
Pathirana, Sisira
Handunnetti, Shiroma
Kawai, Satoru
Kishino, Hirohisa
Horii, Toshihiro
Tanabe, Kazuyuki
Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title_full Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title_fullStr Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title_full_unstemmed Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title_short Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
title_sort lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2832629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20167126
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-52
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