Plasmodium simium: Population Genomics Reveals the Origin of a Reverse Zoonosis

J Infect Dis. 2021 Dec 1;224(11):1950-1961. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiab214.

Abstract

Background: The population history of Plasmodium simium, which causes malaria in sylvatic Neotropical monkeys and humans along the Atlantic Coast of Brazil, remains disputed. Genetically diverse P vivax populations from various sources, including the lineages that founded the species P simium, are thought to have arrived in the Americas in separate migratory waves.

Methods: We use population genomic approaches to investigate the origin and evolution of P simium.

Results: We find a minimal genome-level differentiation between P simium and present-day New World P vivax isolates, consistent with their common geographic origin and subsequent divergence on this continent. The meagre genetic diversity in P simium samples from humans and monkeys implies a recent transfer from humans to non-human primates - a unique example of malaria as a reverse zoonosis of public health significance. Likely genomic signatures of P simium adaptation to new hosts include the deletion of >40% of a key erythrocyte invasion ligand, PvRBP2a, which may have favored more efficient simian host cell infection.

Conclusions: New World P vivax lineages that switched from humans to platyrrhine monkeys founded the P simium population that infects nonhuman primates and feeds sustained human malaria transmission in the outskirts of major cities.

Keywords: Plasmodium simium; Neotropical monkeys; reverse zoonosis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bacterial Zoonoses*
  • Brazil
  • Haplorhini
  • Malaria
  • Metagenomics*
  • Monkey Diseases / parasitology*
  • Plasmodium / classification
  • Plasmodium / genetics*
  • Plasmodium vivax
  • Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide