Publication: Pooled sequencing and rare variant association tests for identifying the determinants of emerging drug resistance in malaria parasites
Issued Date
2015-04-01
Resource Type
ISSN
15371719
07374038
07374038
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-84988299737
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Mahidol University
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Molecular Biology and Evolution. Vol.32, No.4 (2015), 1080-1090
Suggested Citation
Ian H. Cheeseman, Marina McDew-White, Aung Pyae Phyo, Kanlaya Sriprawat, Francois Nosten, Timothy J.C. Anderson Pooled sequencing and rare variant association tests for identifying the determinants of emerging drug resistance in malaria parasites. Molecular Biology and Evolution. Vol.32, No.4 (2015), 1080-1090. doi:10.1093/molbev/msu397 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/35179
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Title
Pooled sequencing and rare variant association tests for identifying the determinants of emerging drug resistance in malaria parasites
Abstract
© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. We explored the potential of pooled sequencing to swiftly and economically identify selective sweeps due to emerging artemisinin (ART) resistance in a South-East Asian malaria parasite population. ART resistance is defined by slow parasite clearance from the blood of ART-treated patients and mutations in the kelch gene (chr. 13) have been strongly implicated to play a role. We constructed triplicate pools of 70 slow-clearing (resistant) and 70 fast-clearing (sensitive) infections collected from the Thai-Myanmar border and sequenced these to high (∼150-fold) read depth. Allele frequency estimates from pools showed almost perfect correlation (Lin's concordance = 0.98) with allele frequencies at 93 single nucleotide polymorphisms measured directly from individual infections, giving us confidence in the accuracy of this approach. By mapping genome-wide divergence (FST) between pools of drug-resistant and drug-sensitive parasites, we identified two large (>150 kb) regions (on chrs. 13 and 14) and 17 smaller candidate genome regions. To identify individual genes within these genome regions, we resequenced an additional 38 parasite genomes (16 slow and 22 fast-clearing) and performed rare variant association tests. These confirmed kelch as a major molecular marker for ART resistance (P = 6.03 × 10-6). This two-tier approach is powerful because pooled sequencing rapidly narrows down genome regions of interest, while targeted rare variant association testing within these regions can pinpoint the genetic basis of resistance. We show that our approach is robust to recurrent mutation and the generation of soft selective sweeps, which are predicted to be common in pathogen populations with large effective population sizes, and may confound more traditional gene mapping approaches.