We examined the mitogenomes of a large global collection of human malaria parasites to explore how and when Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax entered the Americas. We found evidence of a significant contribution of African and South Asian lineages to present-day New World malaria parasites with additional P. vivax lineages appearing to originate from Melanesia that were putatively carried by the Australasian peoples who contributed genes to Native Americans. Importantly, mitochondrial lineages of the P. vivax-like species P. simium are shared by platyrrhine monkeys and humans in the Atlantic Forest ecosystem, but not across the Amazon, which most likely resulted from one or a few recent human-to-monkey transfers. While enslaved Africans were likely the main carriers of P. falciparum mitochondrial lineages into the Americas after the conquest, additional parasites carried by Australasian peoples in pre-Columbian times may have contributed to the extensive diversity of extant local populations of P. vivax.
BackgroundThe Americas were the last continent colonized by humans carrying malaria parasites. Plasmodium falciparum from the New World shows very little genetic diversity and greater linkage disequilibrium, compared with its African counterparts, and is clearly subdivided into local, highly divergent populations. However, limited available data have revealed extensive genetic diversity in American populations of another major human malaria parasite, P. vivax.MethodsWe used an improved sample preparation strategy and next-generation sequencing to characterize 9 high-quality P. vivax genome sequences from northwestern Brazil. These new data were compared with publicly available sequences from recently sampled clinical P. vivax isolates from Brazil (BRA, total n = 11 sequences), Peru (PER, n = 23), Colombia (COL, n = 31), and Mexico (MEX, n = 19).Principal findings/ConclusionsWe found that New World populations of P. vivax are as diverse (nucleotide diversity π between 5.2 × 10−4 and 6.2 × 10−4) as P. vivax populations from Southeast Asia, where malaria transmission is substantially more intense. They display several non-synonymous nucleotide substitutions (some of them previously undescribed) in genes known or suspected to be involved in antimalarial drug resistance, such as dhfr, dhps, mdr1, mrp1, and mrp-2, but not in the chloroquine resistance transporter ortholog (crt-o) gene. Moreover, P. vivax in the Americas is much less geographically substructured than local P. falciparum populations, with relatively little between-population genome-wide differentiation (pairwise FST values ranging between 0.025 and 0.092). Finally, P. vivax populations show a rapid decline in linkage disequilibrium with increasing distance between pairs of polymorphic sites, consistent with very frequent outcrossing. We hypothesize that the high diversity of present-day P. vivax lineages in the Americas originated from successive migratory waves and subsequent admixture between parasite lineages from geographically diverse sites. Further genome-wide analyses are required to test the demographic scenario suggested by our data.
Background The Americas were the last continent to be settled by modern humans, but how and when human malaria parasites arrived in the New World is uncertain. Here, we apply phylogenetic analysis and coalescent-based gene flow modeling to a global collection of Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax mitogenomes to infer the demographic history and geographic origins of malaria parasites circulating in the Americas. Importantly, we examine P.vivax mitogenomes from previously unsampled forest-covered sites along the Atlantic Coast of Brazil, including the vivax-like species P. simium that locally infects platyrrhini monkeys. ResultsThe best-supported gene flow models are consistent with migration of both malaria parasites from Africa and South Asia to the New World, with no genetic signature of a population bottleneck upon parasite's arrival in the Americas. We found evidence of additional gene flow from Melanesia in P. vivax (but not P. falciparum) mitogenomes from the Americas and speculate that some P. vivax lineages might have arrived with the Australasian peoples who contributed genes to Native Americans in pre-Columbian times. Mitochondrial haplotypes characterized in P. simium from monkeys from the Atlantic Forest are shared by local humans.These vivax-like lineages have not spread to the Amazon Basin, are much less diverse than P. vivax circulating elsewhere in Brazil, and show no close genetic relatedness with P. vivax populations from other continents. ConclusionsEnslaved peoples brought from a wide variety of African locations were major carriers of P. falciparum mitochondrial lineages into the Americas, but additional human migration waves are likely to have contributed to the extensive genetic diversity of present-day New World populations of P. vivax. The reduced genetic diversity of vivax-like monkey parasites, compared with human P. vivax from across this country, argues for a recent humanto-monkey transfer of these lineages in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil. Word count: 299 Author summaryMalaria is currently endemic to the Americas, with over 400,000 laboratory-confirmed infections reported annually, but how and when human malaria parasites entered this continent remains largely unknown. To determine the geographic origins of malaria parasites currently circulating in the Americas, we examined a global collection of Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax mitochondrial genomes, including those from understudied isolates of P. vivax and P. simium, a vivax-like species that infect platyrrhini monkeys, from the Atlantic Forest of Brazil.We found evidence of significant historical migration to the New World of malaria parasites from Africa and, to a lesser extent, South Asia, with further genetic contribution of Melanesian lineages to South American P. vivax populations. Importantly, mitochondrial haplotypes of P. simium are shared by monkeys and humans from the Atlantic Forest, most likely as a result of a recent human-to-monkey transfer. Interestingly, these potentially zoonotic lineages are not found in the ...
Background Plasmodium vivax is a neglected human malaria parasite that causes significant morbidity in the Americas, the Middle East, Asia, and the Western Pacific. Population genomic approaches remain little explored to map local and regional transmission pathways of P . vivax across the main endemic sites in the Americas, where great progress has been made towards malaria elimination over the past decades. Methodology/Principal findings We analyze 38 patient-derived P . vivax genome sequences from Mâncio Lima (ML)–the Amazonian malaria hotspot next to the Brazil-Peru border—and 24 sequences from two other sites in Acre State, Brazil, a country that contributes 23% of malaria cases in the Americas. We show that the P . vivax population of ML is genetically diverse (π = 4.7 × 10 −4 ), with a high polymorphism particularly in genes encoding proteins putatively involved in red blood cell invasion. Paradoxically, however, parasites display strong genome-wide linkage disequilibrium, being fragmented into discrete lineages that are remarkably stable across time and space, with only occasional recombination between them. Using identity-by-descent approaches, we identified a large cluster of closely related sequences that comprises 16 of 38 genomes sampled in ML over 26 months. Importantly, we found significant ancestry sharing between parasites at a large geographic distance, consistent with substantial gene flow between regional P . vivax populations. Conclusions/Significance We have characterized the sustained expansion of highly inbred P . vivax lineages in a malaria hotspot that can seed regional transmission. Potential source populations in hotspots represent a priority target for malaria elimination in the Amazon.
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. However, here 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.
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