Abstract

Antimalarial drug resistance is a major global challenge in malaria control and elimination. Mutations in six different genes of Plasmodium falciparum (crt, mdr1, dhfr, dhps, ATPase6 and K-13 propeller) that confer resistance to chloroquine, sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine and artemisinin-based combination therapy were analyzed in samples from Chhattisgarh. Seventy-eight percent of the samples were found to have a pfcrt mutation (53% double, 24% triple and 1% single mutant), and 59% of pfmdr1 genes were found to have an N86Y mutation. Double mutations were recorded in pfdhfr gene among 76% of the samples while only 6% of the samples harbored mutant genotypes in pfdhps. No mutation was found in the K-13 propeller gene, while only one sample showed a mutant genotype for the PfATPase6 gene. The Tajima test confirmed that there is no role of evolutionary natural selection in drug resistance, and gene pairwise linkage of disequilibrium showed significant intragenic association. The high level of pfcrt mutations suggests that parasite resistance to chloroquine is almost at a fixed level, whereas resistance to SP is evolving in the population and parasites remain sensitive to artemisinin derivatives. These findings provide potential information and understanding of the evolution and spread of different drug resistance alleles in Chhattisgarh.

Highlights

  • Chloroquine-resistance transporter and P. falciparum multidrug resistance genes[8]

  • We assessed the prevalence of point mutations involved in the antimalarial resistance genes pfcrt & pfmdr[1], pfdhfr & pfdhps and PfATPase6 & K-13 propeller among P. falciparum samples from Chhattisgarh, Central India

  • Of 271 P. falciparum patients, 180 polymerase chain reaction (PCR)positive patients who fulfilled the enrolment criteria were included in the study (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Chloroquine-resistance transporter (pfcrt) and P. falciparum multidrug resistance (pfmdr1) genes[8]. To achieve the goal of malaria elimination, molecular data on anti-malarial drug resistance with wide coverage in India, in highly endemic states, is needed for proper implementation of antimalarial drug treatment policy. With this aim, we assessed the prevalence of point mutations involved in the antimalarial resistance genes pfcrt & pfmdr[1] (for CQ), pfdhfr & pfdhps (for SP) and PfATPase6 & K-13 propeller (for ART) among P. falciparum samples from Chhattisgarh, Central India.

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