Genome-wide diversity and differentiation in New World populations of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax.
Thais C de OliveiraPriscila T RodriguesMaria José MenezesRaquel M Gonçalves-LopesMelissa S BastosNathália F LimaSusana BarbosaAlexandra L GerberGuilherme Loss de MoraisLuisa BernáJody PhelanCarlos RobelloAna Tereza R de VasconcelosJoão Marcelo P AlvesMarcelo Urbano FerreiraPublished in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2017)
We found that New World populations of P. vivax are as diverse (nucleotide diversity π between 5.2 × 10-4 and 6.2 × 10-4) as P. vivax populations from Southeast Asia, where malaria transmission is substantially more intense. They display several non-synonymous nucleotide substitutions (some of them previously undescribed) in genes known or suspected to be involved in antimalarial drug resistance, such as dhfr, dhps, mdr1, mrp1, and mrp-2, but not in the chloroquine resistance transporter ortholog (crt-o) gene. Moreover, P. vivax in the Americas is much less geographically substructured than local P. falciparum populations, with relatively little between-population genome-wide differentiation (pairwise FST values ranging between 0.025 and 0.092). Finally, P. vivax populations show a rapid decline in linkage disequilibrium with increasing distance between pairs of polymorphic sites, consistent with very frequent outcrossing. We hypothesize that the high diversity of present-day P. vivax lineages in the Americas originated from successive migratory waves and subsequent admixture between parasite lineages from geographically diverse sites. Further genome-wide analyses are required to test the demographic scenario suggested by our data.