Cargando…

Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific

The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is more resistant to malaria control strategies than Plasmodium falciparum, and maintains high genetic diversity even when transmission is low. To investigate whether declining P. vivax transmission leads to increasing population structure that would facil...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Waltmann, Andreea, Koepfli, Cristian, Tessier, Natacha, Karl, Stephan, Fola, Abebe, Darcy, Andrew W., Wini, Lyndes, Harrison, G. L. Abby, Barnadas, Céline, Jennison, Charlie, Karunajeewa, Harin, Boyd, Sarah, Whittaker, Maxine, Kazura, James, Bahlo, Melanie, Mueller, Ivo, Barry, Alyssa E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5802943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29373596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006146
_version_ 1783298620551856128
author Waltmann, Andreea
Koepfli, Cristian
Tessier, Natacha
Karl, Stephan
Fola, Abebe
Darcy, Andrew W.
Wini, Lyndes
Harrison, G. L. Abby
Barnadas, Céline
Jennison, Charlie
Karunajeewa, Harin
Boyd, Sarah
Whittaker, Maxine
Kazura, James
Bahlo, Melanie
Mueller, Ivo
Barry, Alyssa E.
author_facet Waltmann, Andreea
Koepfli, Cristian
Tessier, Natacha
Karl, Stephan
Fola, Abebe
Darcy, Andrew W.
Wini, Lyndes
Harrison, G. L. Abby
Barnadas, Céline
Jennison, Charlie
Karunajeewa, Harin
Boyd, Sarah
Whittaker, Maxine
Kazura, James
Bahlo, Melanie
Mueller, Ivo
Barry, Alyssa E.
author_sort Waltmann, Andreea
collection PubMed
description The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is more resistant to malaria control strategies than Plasmodium falciparum, and maintains high genetic diversity even when transmission is low. To investigate whether declining P. vivax transmission leads to increasing population structure that would facilitate elimination, we genotyped samples from across the Southwest Pacific region, which experiences an eastward decline in malaria transmission, as well as samples from two time points at one site (Tetere, Solomon Islands) during intensified malaria control. Analysis of 887 P. vivax microsatellite haplotypes from hyperendemic Papua New Guinea (PNG, n = 443), meso-hyperendemic Solomon Islands (n = 420), and hypoendemic Vanuatu (n = 24) revealed increasing population structure and multilocus linkage disequilibrium yet a modest decline in diversity as transmission decreases over space and time. In Solomon Islands, which has had sustained control efforts for 20 years, and Vanuatu, which has experienced sustained low transmission for many years, significant population structure was observed at different spatial scales. We conclude that control efforts will eventually impact P. vivax population structure and with sustained pressure, populations may eventually fragment into a limited number of clustered foci that could be targeted for elimination.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5802943
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58029432018-02-23 Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific Waltmann, Andreea Koepfli, Cristian Tessier, Natacha Karl, Stephan Fola, Abebe Darcy, Andrew W. Wini, Lyndes Harrison, G. L. Abby Barnadas, Céline Jennison, Charlie Karunajeewa, Harin Boyd, Sarah Whittaker, Maxine Kazura, James Bahlo, Melanie Mueller, Ivo Barry, Alyssa E. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is more resistant to malaria control strategies than Plasmodium falciparum, and maintains high genetic diversity even when transmission is low. To investigate whether declining P. vivax transmission leads to increasing population structure that would facilitate elimination, we genotyped samples from across the Southwest Pacific region, which experiences an eastward decline in malaria transmission, as well as samples from two time points at one site (Tetere, Solomon Islands) during intensified malaria control. Analysis of 887 P. vivax microsatellite haplotypes from hyperendemic Papua New Guinea (PNG, n = 443), meso-hyperendemic Solomon Islands (n = 420), and hypoendemic Vanuatu (n = 24) revealed increasing population structure and multilocus linkage disequilibrium yet a modest decline in diversity as transmission decreases over space and time. In Solomon Islands, which has had sustained control efforts for 20 years, and Vanuatu, which has experienced sustained low transmission for many years, significant population structure was observed at different spatial scales. We conclude that control efforts will eventually impact P. vivax population structure and with sustained pressure, populations may eventually fragment into a limited number of clustered foci that could be targeted for elimination. Public Library of Science 2018-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5802943/ /pubmed/29373596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006146 Text en © 2018 Waltmann et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Waltmann, Andreea
Koepfli, Cristian
Tessier, Natacha
Karl, Stephan
Fola, Abebe
Darcy, Andrew W.
Wini, Lyndes
Harrison, G. L. Abby
Barnadas, Céline
Jennison, Charlie
Karunajeewa, Harin
Boyd, Sarah
Whittaker, Maxine
Kazura, James
Bahlo, Melanie
Mueller, Ivo
Barry, Alyssa E.
Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title_full Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title_fullStr Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title_full_unstemmed Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title_short Increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of Plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the Southwest Pacific
title_sort increasingly inbred and fragmented populations of plasmodium vivax associated with the eastward decline in malaria transmission across the southwest pacific
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5802943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29373596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006146
work_keys_str_mv AT waltmannandreea increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT koepflicristian increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT tessiernatacha increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT karlstephan increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT folaabebe increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT darcyandreww increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT winilyndes increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT harrisonglabby increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT barnadasceline increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT jennisoncharlie increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT karunajeewaharin increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT boydsarah increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT whittakermaxine increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT kazurajames increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT bahlomelanie increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT muellerivo increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific
AT barryalyssae increasinglyinbredandfragmentedpopulationsofplasmodiumvivaxassociatedwiththeeastwarddeclineinmalariatransmissionacrossthesouthwestpacific