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Population genetic analysis of Plasmodium knowlesi reveals differential selection and exchange events between Borneo and Peninsular sub-populations

Authors :
Anna Turkiewicz
Emilia Manko
Damiola R. Oresegun
Debbie Nolder
Anton Spadar
Colin J. Sutherland
Janet Cox-Singh
Robert W. Moon
Yee-Ling Lau
Susana Campino
Taane G. Clark
University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
University of St Andrews. Centre for Research into Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
University of St Andrews. Biomedical Sciences Research Complex
University of St Andrews. St Andrews Bioinformatics Unit
University of St Andrews. Infection and Global Health Division
Source :
Scientific Reports. 13
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

The zoonotic Plasmodium knowlesi parasite is a growing public health concern in Southeast Asia, especially in Malaysia, where elimination of P. falciparum and P. vivax malaria has been the focus of control efforts. Understanding of the genetic diversity of P. knowlesi parasites can provide insights into its evolution, population structure, diagnostics, transmission dynamics, and the emergence of drug resistance. Previous work has revealed that P. knowlesi fall into three main sub-populations distinguished by a combination of geographical location and macaque host (Macaca fascicularis and M. nemestrina). It has been shown that Malaysian Borneo groups display profound heterogeneity with long regions of high or low divergence resulting in mosaic patterns between sub-populations, with some evidence of chromosomal-segment exchanges. However, the genetic structure of non-Borneo sub-populations is less clear. By gathering one of the largest collections of P. knowlesi whole-genome sequencing data, we studied structural genomic changes across sub-populations, with the analysis revealing differences in Borneo clusters linked to mosquito-related stages of the parasite cycle, in contrast to differences in host-related stages for the Peninsular group. Our work identifies new genetic exchange events, including introgressions between Malaysian Peninsular and M. nemestrina-associated clusters on various chromosomes, including in parasite invasion genes (DBP$$\beta$$ β , NBPX$$\alpha$$ α and NBPX$$\beta$$ β ), and important proteins expressed in the vertebrate parasite stages. Recombination events appear to have occurred between the Peninsular and M. fascicularis-associated groups, including in the DBP$$\beta$$ β and DBP$$\gamma$$ γ invasion associated genes. Overall, our work finds that genetic exchange events have occurred among the recognised contemporary groups of P. knowlesi parasites during their evolutionary history, leading to apparent mosaicism between these sub-populations. These findings generate new hypotheses relevant to parasite evolutionary biology and P. knowlesi epidemiology, which can inform malaria control approaches to containing the impact of zoonotic malaria on human communities.

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....81d433de2e6dc75b9db96b2da000307a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-29368-4