恶性疟原虫
生物
抗药性
基因型
基因座(遗传学)
遗传学
体内
微生物学
离体
病毒学
基因
疟疾
免疫学
作者
Oriana Kreutzfeld,Stephen Orena,Martin Okitwi,Patrick K. Tumwebaze,Oswald Byaruhanga,Thomas Katairo,Melissa D. Conrad,Jennifer Legac,Shreeya Garg,Rebecca Crudale,Özkan Aydemir,David Giesbrecht,Samuel L. Nsobya,Benjamin Blasco,Maëlle Duffey,Mélanie Rouillier,Ann M. Moormann,Roland A. Cooper,Philip J. Rosenthal
摘要
ABSTRACT Novel antimalarials are urgently needed to combat rising resistance to available drugs. The imidazolopiperazine ganaplacide is a promising drug candidate, but decreased susceptibility of laboratory strains has been linked to polymorphisms in the Plasmodium falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (PfCARL), acetyl-CoA transporter (PfACT), and UDP-galactose transporter (PfUGT). To characterize parasites causing disease in Africa, we assessed ex vivo drug susceptibilities to ganaplacide in 750 P . falciparum isolates collected in Uganda from 2017 to 2023. Drug susceptibilities were assessed using a 72-hour SYBR Green growth inhibition assay. The median IC 50 for ganaplacide was 13.8 nM, but some isolates had up to 31-fold higher IC 50 s (31/750 with IC 50 > 100 nM). To assess genotype-phenotype associations, we sequenced genes potentially mediating altered ganaplacide susceptibility in the isolates using molecular inversion probe and dideoxy sequencing methods. PfCARL was highly polymorphic, with eight mutations present in >5% of isolates. None of these eight mutations had previously been selected in laboratory strains with in vitro drug pressure and none were found to be significantly associated with decreased ganaplacide susceptibility. Mutations in PfACT and PfUGT were found in ≤5% of isolates, except for two frequent (>20%) mutations in PfACT; one mutation in PfACT (I140V) was associated with a modest decrease in susceptibility. Overall, Ugandan P. falciparum isolates were mostly highly susceptible to ganaplacide. Known resistance mediators were polymorphic, but mutations previously selected with in vitro drug pressure were not seen, and mutations identified in the Ugandan isolates were generally not associated with decreased ganaplacide susceptibility.
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