Abstract

Multidrug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum parasites have emerged in Cambodia and neighboring countries in Southeast Asia, compromising the efficacy of first-line antimalarial combinations. Dihydroartemisinin + piperaquine (PPQ) treatment failure rates have risen to as high as 50% in some areas in this region. For PPQ, resistance is driven primarily by a series of mutant alleles of the P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter (PfCRT). PPQ resistance was reported in China three decades earlier, but the molecular driver remained unknown. Herein, we identify a PPQ-resistant pfcrt allele (China C) from Yunnan Province, China, whose genotypic lineage is distinct from the PPQ-resistant pfcrt alleles currently observed in Cambodia. Combining gene editing and competitive growth assays, we report that PfCRT China C confers moderate PPQ resistance while re-sensitizing parasites to chloroquine (CQ) and incurring a fitness cost that manifests as a reduced rate of parasite growth. PPQ transport assays using purified PfCRT isoforms, combined with molecular dynamics simulations, highlight differences in drug transport kinetics and in this transporter's central cavity conformation between China C and the current Southeast Asian PPQ-resistant isoforms. We also report a novel computational model that incorporates empirically determined fitness landscapes at varying drug concentrations, combined with antimalarial susceptibility profiles, mutation rates, and drug pharmacokinetics. Our simulations with PPQ-resistant or -sensitive parasite lines predict that a three-day regimen of PPQ combined with CQ can effectively clear infections and prevent the evolution of PfCRT variants. This work suggests that including CQ in combination therapies could be effective in suppressing the evolution of PfCRT-mediated multidrug resistance in regions where PPQ has lost efficacy.

Highlights

  • The evolution of drug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stage parasites continues to threaten global malaria treatment and control

  • We show that earlier reports of PPQ resistance in Yunnan Province, China could be explained by the unique China C variant of the P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter (PfCRT)

  • Gene-edited parasites show a loss of fitness and parasite resensitization to the chemically related former first-line antimalarial chloroquine, while acquiring PPQ resistance via drug efflux

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution of drug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stage parasites continues to threaten global malaria treatment and control. In 2020, malaria resulted in an estimated 241 million cases and 627,000 deaths [1]. Resistance to the former first line antimalarial, chloroquine (CQ), first emerged in Southeast Asia (SE Asia) and later swept across Africa, causing substantial increases in mortality [2,3]. Resistance has emerged to the ACT partner drug piperaquine (PPQ), leading to up to 50% treatment failures with this combination in some areas of the Greater Mekong Subregion [4,5]. As new PPQ resistance mutations appear across SE Asia, it is imperative to understand their evolution, how they affect drug susceptibilities

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