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Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon

BACKGROUND: Peru is one of the Latin American countries with the highest malaria burden, mainly due to Plasmodium vivax infections. However, little is known about P. vivax transmission dynamics in the Peruvian Amazon, where most malaria cases occur. The genetic diversity and population structure of...

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Autores principales: Van den Eede, Peter, Van der Auwera, Gert, Delgado, Christopher, Huyse, Tine, Soto-Calle, Veronica E, Gamboa, Dionicia, Grande, Tanilu, Rodriguez, Hugo, Llanos, Alejandro, Anné, Jozef, Erhart, Annette, D'Alessandro, Umberto
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2898784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20525233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-151
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author Van den Eede, Peter
Van der Auwera, Gert
Delgado, Christopher
Huyse, Tine
Soto-Calle, Veronica E
Gamboa, Dionicia
Grande, Tanilu
Rodriguez, Hugo
Llanos, Alejandro
Anné, Jozef
Erhart, Annette
D'Alessandro, Umberto
author_facet Van den Eede, Peter
Van der Auwera, Gert
Delgado, Christopher
Huyse, Tine
Soto-Calle, Veronica E
Gamboa, Dionicia
Grande, Tanilu
Rodriguez, Hugo
Llanos, Alejandro
Anné, Jozef
Erhart, Annette
D'Alessandro, Umberto
author_sort Van den Eede, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Peru is one of the Latin American countries with the highest malaria burden, mainly due to Plasmodium vivax infections. However, little is known about P. vivax transmission dynamics in the Peruvian Amazon, where most malaria cases occur. The genetic diversity and population structure of P. vivax isolates collected in different communities around Iquitos city, the capital of the Peruvian Amazon, was determined. METHODS: Plasmodium vivax population structure was determined by multilocus genotyping with 16 microsatellites on 159 P. vivax infected blood samples (mono-infections) collected in four sites around Iquitos city. The population characteristics were assessed only in samples with monoclonal infections (n = 94), and the genetic diversity was determined by calculating the expected heterozygosity and allelic richness. Both linkage disequilibrium and the genetic differentiation (θ) were estimated. RESULTS: The proportion of polyclonal infections varied substantially by site (11% - 70%), with the expected heterozygosity ranging between 0.44 and 0.69; no haplotypes were shared between the different populations. Linkage disequilibrium was present in all populations (I(A)(S )0.14 - 0.61) but was higher in those with fewer polyclonal infections, suggesting inbreeding and a clonal population structure. Strong population differentiation (θ = 0.45) was found and the Bayesian inference cluster analysis identified six clusters based on distinctive allele frequencies. CONCLUSION: The P. vivax populations circulating in the Peruvian Amazon basin are genetically diverse, strongly differentiated and they have a low effective recombination rate. These results are in line with the low and clustered pattern of malaria transmission observed in the region around Iquitos city.
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spelling pubmed-28987842010-07-08 Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon Van den Eede, Peter Van der Auwera, Gert Delgado, Christopher Huyse, Tine Soto-Calle, Veronica E Gamboa, Dionicia Grande, Tanilu Rodriguez, Hugo Llanos, Alejandro Anné, Jozef Erhart, Annette D'Alessandro, Umberto Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Peru is one of the Latin American countries with the highest malaria burden, mainly due to Plasmodium vivax infections. However, little is known about P. vivax transmission dynamics in the Peruvian Amazon, where most malaria cases occur. The genetic diversity and population structure of P. vivax isolates collected in different communities around Iquitos city, the capital of the Peruvian Amazon, was determined. METHODS: Plasmodium vivax population structure was determined by multilocus genotyping with 16 microsatellites on 159 P. vivax infected blood samples (mono-infections) collected in four sites around Iquitos city. The population characteristics were assessed only in samples with monoclonal infections (n = 94), and the genetic diversity was determined by calculating the expected heterozygosity and allelic richness. Both linkage disequilibrium and the genetic differentiation (θ) were estimated. RESULTS: The proportion of polyclonal infections varied substantially by site (11% - 70%), with the expected heterozygosity ranging between 0.44 and 0.69; no haplotypes were shared between the different populations. Linkage disequilibrium was present in all populations (I(A)(S )0.14 - 0.61) but was higher in those with fewer polyclonal infections, suggesting inbreeding and a clonal population structure. Strong population differentiation (θ = 0.45) was found and the Bayesian inference cluster analysis identified six clusters based on distinctive allele frequencies. CONCLUSION: The P. vivax populations circulating in the Peruvian Amazon basin are genetically diverse, strongly differentiated and they have a low effective recombination rate. These results are in line with the low and clustered pattern of malaria transmission observed in the region around Iquitos city. BioMed Central 2010-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2898784/ /pubmed/20525233 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-151 Text en Copyright ©2010 Van den Eede 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
Van den Eede, Peter
Van der Auwera, Gert
Delgado, Christopher
Huyse, Tine
Soto-Calle, Veronica E
Gamboa, Dionicia
Grande, Tanilu
Rodriguez, Hugo
Llanos, Alejandro
Anné, Jozef
Erhart, Annette
D'Alessandro, Umberto
Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title_full Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title_fullStr Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title_short Multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the Plasmodium vivax population in the Peruvian Amazon
title_sort multilocus genotyping reveals high heterogeneity and strong local population structure of the plasmodium vivax population in the peruvian amazon
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2898784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20525233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-151
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