Abstract

BackgroundResistance to all available anti-malarial drugs has emerged and spread including artemisinin derivatives and their partner drugs. Several genes involved in artemisinin and partner drugs resistance, such as pfcrt, pfmdr1, pfK13 or pfpm2, have been identified. However, these genes do not properly explain anti-malarial drug resistance, and more particularly clinical failures observed in Africa. Mutations in genes encoding for Plasmodium falciparum proteins, such as P. falciparum Acetyl-CoA transporter (PfACT), P. falciparum UDP-galactose transporter (PfUGT) and P. falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (PfCARL) have recently been associated to resistance to imidazolopiperazines and other unrelated drugs.MethodsMutations on pfugt, pfact and pfcarl were characterized on 86 isolates collected in Dakar, Senegal and 173 samples collected from patients hospitalized in France after a travel in African countries from 2015 and 2016 to assess their potential association with ex vivo susceptibility to chloroquine, quinine, lumefantrine, monodesethylamodiaquine, mefloquine, dihydroartemisinin, artesunate, doxycycline, pyronaridine and piperaquine.ResultsNo mutations were found on the genes pfugt and pfact. None of the pfcarl described mutations were identified in these samples from Africa. The K784N mutation was found in one sample and the K734M mutation was identified on 7.9% of all samples for pfcarl. The only significant differences in ex vivo susceptibility according to the K734M mutation were observed for pyronaridine for African isolates from imported malaria and for doxycycline for Senegalese parasites.ConclusionNo evidence was found of involvement of these genes in reduced susceptibility to standard anti-malarial drugs in African P. falciparum isolates.

Highlights

  • Resistance to all available anti-malarial drugs has emerged and spread including artemisinin derivatives and their partner drugs

  • The present study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of polymorphisms in pfact, pfugt and pfcarl genes and to evaluate their association with reduced susceptibility to common anti-malarial drugs on 259 P. falciparum African isolates

  • None of the mutations of the pfcarl gene involved in imidazolopiperazine resistance was found in African P. falciparum isolates but three other ones were identified: the K784N mutation present in one isolate, the K734M mutation (7.9%) and the K903E mutation (100%)

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Summary

Introduction

Resistance to all available anti-malarial drugs has emerged and spread including artemisinin derivatives and their partner drugs. Several genes involved in artemisinin and partner drugs resistance, such as pfcrt, pfmdr, pfK13 or pfpm, have been identified. These genes do not properly explain anti-malarial drug resistance, and more clinical failures observed in Africa. Artemisinin-based combinations are the most potent available anti-malarial drugs that are used for the reduction of the malaria global burden. It was reported that low treatment success rate of ACT was associated with resistance to the partner drugs. This resistance has been described in Southeast Asia and may occur in Africa soon [6, 7]

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