Antimalarial Drug Resistance Profiling of Plasmodium falciparum Infections in India Using Next-Generation Sequencing

medRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Apr 9:2023.04.08.23288321. doi: 10.1101/2023.04.08.23288321.

Abstract

Background: Tracking the emergence and spread of antimalarial drug resistance has become critical to sustaining progress towards the control and eventual elimination of malaria in South Asia, especially India.

Methods: An amplicon sequencing protocol was used for high-throughput molecular surveillance of antimalarial drug resistance in a total of 158 isolates at three sites in India: Chennai, Nadiad and Rourkela. Five genes of the Plasmodium falciparum implicated in antimalarial resistance were investigated here; Pfcrt for chloroquine resistance, Pfdhfr for pyrimethamine resistance, Pfdhps for sulfadoxine resistance, Pfk13 for artemisinin resistance and Pfmdr1 for resistance to multiple antimalarials.

Results: Mutations in the propeller domain of PfK13 were observed in two samples only, however these mutations are not validated for artemisinin resistance. A high proportion of parasites from the P. falciparum dominant site Rourkela showed wild-type Pfcrt and Pfdhfr haplotypes, while mutant Pfcrt and Pfdhfr haplotypes were fixed at the P. vivax dominant sites Chennai and Nadiad. The wild-type PfDHPS haplotype was predominant across all study sites. Finally, we observed the largest proportion of suspected multi-clonal infections at Rourkela, which has the highest transmission of P. falciparum among our study sites.

Conclusion: This is the first simultaneous high-throughput next generation sequencing of five complete P. falciparum genes from infected patients in India.

Keywords: India; Plasmodium falciparum; antimalarial drug resistance; deep sequencing; genomic.

Publication types

  • Preprint