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. 2005 Sep 15;4:42. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-4-42

Concurrence of Plasmodium falciparum dhfr and crt mutations in northern Ghana

Frank P Mockenhaupt 1,, J Teun Bousema 2, Teunis A Eggelte 3, Stephan Ehrhardt 1,4, Rowland N Otchwemah 5, Robert W Sauerwein 2, Ulrich Bienzle 1
PMCID: PMC1261531  PMID: 16164748

Abstract

Background

Both chloroquine (CQ) and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) are failing drugs in much of sub-Saharan Africa. Previous findings suggest an association between resistance to CQ and to SP in vivo, in vitro, and on the molecular level.

Methods

In 126 Ghanaian children with uncomplicated malaria, associations between mutations conferring resistance in the Plasmodium falciparum dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr; SP) and chloroquine resistance transporter (crt; CQ) genes, concentrations of residual antimalarial drugs, and gametocyte carriage were examined.

Results

Mutant dhfr alleles and the CQ-resistance allele crt T76 were strongly associated with each other. Isolates exhibiting the dhfr triple mutation seven times more likely also contained crt T76 parasites as compared to isolates without the dhfr triple variant (P = 0.0001). Moreover, both, isolates with the dhfr triple mutation (adjusted OR, 3.2 (95%CI, 1.0–10.4)) and with crt T76 (adjusted OR, 14.5 (1.4–150.8)) were associated with an increased likelihood of pre-treatment gametocytaemia. However, crt T76 did not correlate with gametocytaemia following SP treatment and no selection of crt T76 in SP treatment failure isolates was observed.

Conclusion

These results confirm an association between CQ and SP resistance markers in isolates from northern Ghana. This could indicate accelerated development of resistance to SP if CQ resistance is already present, or vice versa. Considering the enhanced transmission potential as reflected by the increased proportion of isolates containing gametocytes when resistant parasites are present, co-resistance can be expected to spread in this area. However, the underlying mechanism leading to this constellation remains obscure.

Background

Chloroquine (CQ) and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) are the most frequently used antimalarial drugs in sub-Saharan Africa. With the spread and intensification of drug resistance of Plasmodium falciparum more effective combinatory drug regimes are now introduced in many African countries [1]. However, CQ and SP are cheap and widely available and will most likely be in use for some more years, particularly in home treatment [2-4].

In several East African countries where SP was introduced in response to intense CQ-resistance, the drug has gradually lost efficacy although the pace of this development is subject to controversy [5,6]. Previously, the core mutations linked with resistance to CQ and SP were found to be associated with each other in isolates from southern Ghana [7]. Although CQ and SP are structurally unrelated and the mutations conferring resistance are located on separate chromosomes [8-10], this finding suggests that parasites resistant to CQ may acquire resistance to SP more easily than sensitive ones, or vice versa. Studies in murine models [11] and in vitro [12,13] support this hypothesis. If this was true, the spread of CQ resistance could pave the way for an accelerated development of SP resistance, and thus, bear substantial importance to the health systems of affected regions. In addition, transmission potential may be increased in both SP and CQ resistant parasites [14,15].

Recently, mutations in the P. falciparum dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) gene in northern Ghana were observed not only to be predictive for SP treatment failure but also to be associated with increased pre-treatment gametocyte carriage [16]. Here, associations between dhfr alleles, the core mutation in the P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter gene (crt T76), residual antimalarials, and gametocyte carriage in children with uncomplicated malaria were re-examined.

Methods

P. falciparum isolates were collected from children with uncomplicated malaria participating in a treatment trial in Tamale, Northern Region, Ghana, at the end of the rainy season 2002. The results of this trial and on the dhfr and dihydropteroate synthetase gene (dhps) patterns are described elsewhere [16,17]. In the present report, data from all 126 children with complete follow-up after SP treatment for whom dhfr and dhps were genotyped are analysed. The study protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee, Ministry of Health, Northern Region, and by the Health Research Unit, Ministry of Health, Accra, and parents' informed consent was obtained.

Patients were children aged 6–59 months with uncomplicated P. falciparum monoinfection (≥ 2,000 ≤ 200,000/μL) [18,19]. None had severe malnutrition, a febrile disease other than malaria, "danger signs" [18], or severe malaria [20]. Treatment consisted of a single dose of SP (25/1.25 mg/kg, Fansidar, Roche, Switzerland), and success was monitored according to current guidelines [17,19].

Venous blood was collected into EDTA. Asexual parasites and gametocytes were counted per ≥ 200 and 500 white blood cells, respectively, on Giemsa-stained thick blood films, and densities were calculated based on a putative mean WBC count of 8,000/μL. Gametocyte counts one week following treatment were available for 104 children. Pre-treatment levels of CQ and pyrimethamine in blood were measured by ELISA assays [21] with limits of detection of 10 ng/mL and 25 ng/mL, respectively.

P. falciparum dhfr, dhps, and crt alleles were assessed by restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) of amplicons generated by nested PCR assays applying hot start procedures (HotStart Taq, Qiagen, Germany). Primers and conditions are described elsewhere [22,23] as are restriction enzymes and RFLP conditions to characterize the codons dhfr, 16, 51, 59, 108, 164; dhps, 436, 437, 540, 581, 613; and crt, 76. Laboratory strains were used as controls for PCR and RFLP assays. Electrophoresis was perfomed on 3% GTG agarose (FMC Bioproducts, USA) gels.

Frequencies were compared by χ2-test or Fisher's exact test, and continuous variables by Student's t-test, Mann-Whitney U-test, or Kruskal-Wallis test as applicable. Logistic regression models were used to adjust for potential confounders of the presence of resistance mutations and to identify risk factors for gametocytaemia.

Results

The median age of the 68 girls and 58 boys was 28.5 months (range, 6–59). Median axillary temperature and geometric mean parasite density were 38.8°C (range, 37.5–41.0) and 36,358/μL (range, 2,068–175,333/μL), respectively. Gametocytes were found in 19% (24/126) of the children at a geometric mean density of 50/μL (16–1,120/μL). CQ in blood was observed in 66% (83/126; median, 32 ng/mL, range, 10–718) but pyrimethamine in only two children (78 & 326 ng/mL).

The dhfr alleles Thr-108, Val-16 and Leu-164 were not detected. Classifying mixed alleles as mutant, dhfr Ile-51 occurred in 56% (70/126), Arg-59 in 65% (82/126), and Asn-108 in 72% (91/126). Triple dhfr mutations (Ile-51/Arg-59/Asn-108) were seen in 47% (59/126), and quadruple (triple dhfr + dhps Gly-437) and quintuple (triple dhfr + dhps Gly-437/Glu-540) variants in 44% (55/126), and 0.8% (1/126), respectively. Crt T76 occurred in 80% (101/126) of the isolates.

The concomitant occurrence of dhfr, dhps, and crt alleles in identical isolates was analyzed. All dhfr mutations were linked with each other. Dhfr Ile-51 was associated with Asn-108 (OR, 29.8; 95%CI, 8.0–161, P < 0.0001) and Arg-59 (OR, 7.7; 95%CI, 3.3–19,5, P < 0.0001). All isolates exhibiting dhfr Arg-59 additionally had Asn-108 (P < 0.0001). Notably, in isolates with dhfr variant parasites, the CQ-resistance allele crt T76 occurred significantly more frequent than in the respective wildtype isolates (Tab. 1). Separating isolates into such with e.g. dhfr codon 108 pure wildtype, wildtype & mutant, and pure mutant, the prevalence of crt T76 was 67.5% (23/35), 82.4% (14/17), and 86.5% (64/74), respectively (χ2trend = 6.1; P = 0.01). Basically the same trend was seen for dhfr codons 51 (P = 0.002) and 59 (P = 0.002, data not shown). Vice versa, in isolates with crt wildtype, with both crt wildtype & T76, and crt T76 alone, the dhfr triple mutation was detected in 16% (4/25), 53% (9/17), and 55% (46/84), respectively.

Table 1.

Associations between dhfr and crt mutations in 126 Ghanaian children with uncomplicated malaria

dhfr mutation Prevalence of crt T76 mutation (%) Odds ratio (95%CI) of crt T76 being present

Unadjusted P Adjusted for CQ in blood* P
51
 absent 67.9 (38/56) 1 1
 present 90.0 (63/70) 4.3 (1.5–12.5) 0.002 5.0 (1.8–13.8) 0.002
59
 absent 63.6 (28/44) 1 1
 present 89.0 (73/82) 4.6 (1.7–13.0) 0.0007 4.4 (1.7–11.4) 0.002
108
 absent 65.7 (23/35) 1 1
 present 85.7 (78/91) 3.1 (1.2–8.6) 0.01 3.2 (1.2–8.2) 0.02
triple
 absent 68.7 (46/67) 1 1
 present 93.2 (55/59) 6.3 (1.9–26.6) 0.0006 7.0 (2.2–22.5) 0.001

dhfr, dihydrofolate reductase gene, crt, chloroquine resistance transporter gene; 95%CI, 95% confidence interval; CQ, chloroquine; *, Potential confounders were tested for in logistic regression models including age, sex, parasite density, dhps alleles, and axillary temperature. Adjusted odds ratios include the presence of chloroquine in blood as the only factor found to be associated (univariate odds ratio, 3.2; 95%CI, 1.2–8.6; P = 0.01).

The prevalence of crt T76 increased with increasing number of any dhfr mutations: it was 63% (20/32) in isolates with pure dhfr wildtype, 74% (26/35) in isolates with single or double mutations, and 93% (55/59) in isolates exhibiting the dhfr triple mutation (χ2trend = 13.1; P = 0.0003). Adjusting for CQ in blood, isolates with dhfr triple mutations revealed a seven-fold increased odds of concomitantly exhibiting crt T76 (Tab. 1). Dhps alleles neither correlated with dhfr alleles nor with crt T76 (data not shown).

Dhfr, dhps, and crt alleles were examined with respect to pre-treatment gametocytaemia. As reported elsewhere [16], children were significantly more likely to harbour gametocytes in the presence of dhfr 51, 59, or triple mutations. This was also true for isolates exhibiting crt T76 (Tab. 2). Gametocytes were not observed in any (0/21) isolate with wildtype alleles for both dhfr and crt, but in 16% (8/50) of isolates exhibiting either dhfr or crt mutations, and in 29% (16/55) of isolates revealing both, dhfr triple and crt T76 (χ2trend = 8.7, P = 0.003). Adjusting for additional factors influencing gametocytaemia, i.e. high parasite density arbitrarily set as >50,000/μL, the presence of CQ in blood, and axillary temperature, both the dhfr triple mutation and crt T76 were associated with an increased likelihood of gametocytaemia (Tab. 2). Dhfr alleles or crt T76 were not associated with gametocyte density (data not shown).

Table 2.

Associations with pre-treatment gametocytemia in 126 Ghanaian children with uncomplicated malaria

Factor Prevalence of gametocytemia (%) Odds ratio (95%CI) of gametocytemia

Unadjusted P Multivariate P
CQ in blood
 None 27.9 (12/43) 1 1
 Present 14.5 (12/83) 0.4 (0.2–1.2) 0.07 0.3 (0.1–1.0) 0.04
Ax. temperature n.a. 0.3 (0.1–0.6) 0.0008 0.2 (0.1–0.5) 0.0009
Parasite density
 < 50,000/μL 26.3 (20/76) 1 1
 ≥ 50,000/μL 8.0 (4/50) 0.2 (0.1–0.8) 0.01 0.2 (0.1–0.8) 0.02
dhfr triple mutation
 Absent 10.4 (7/67) 1 1
 Present 28.8 (17/59) 3.5 (1.2–10.2) 0.009 3.2 (1.0–10.4) 0.049
crt 76 mutation
 Absent 4.0 (1/25) 1 1
 Present 22.8 (23/101) 7.1 (1.0–304) 0.04 14.5 (1.4–150.8) 0.02

Ax., axillary; n.a., not applicable

One week after treatment, gametocytes were observed in 63% (66/104) of the children. Gametocytaemia following SP treatment was associated with pre-treatment dhfr mutations, e.g. dhfr Asn-108, OR 3.1; 95%CI, 1.3–7.6. In children harbouring crt T76 parasites, gametocytes were only slightly more frequent (66% (54/82)) than in patients with crt wildtype parasites (55% (12/22), P = 0.3).

Finally, selection of crt T76 in SP treatment failures was examined. No selection was observed: In matched pairs of isolates obtained from 35 children suffering SP treatment failure, crt T76 was present in 86% (30/35) of pre-treatment isolates and in 80% (28/35) of isolates obtained at treatment failure.

Discussion

In this study on P. falciparum isolates from northern Ghana, two major findings are presented. First, SP and CQ resistance markers are strongly associated with each other, independent of residual antimalarials. Second, both are associated with an increased prevalence of gametocytes.

This study has several limitations and particularly the finding of an association between unrelated mutations needs caution in interpretation. Because polyclonal infections predominate in the area [24], the detection of a mutant allele in an isolate does not necessarily mean that all clones carry the mutation. Thus, it cannot be stated whether the linkage between the resistance markers is a true one, i.e. on the chromosomal level, or reflects co-occurrence in individual isolates. The limited number of crt wildtypes also hampered proper testing of a linkage disequilibrium. Although dhfr mutations were significantly more common in the presence of crt T76 this observation needs to be construed with caution since 80% of the isolates in this study harboured the latter variant. Also, it is impossible to comment whether the presence of crt T76 favours the presence of dhfr mutations or vice versa because this requires longitudinal observations. Likewise, the lack of temporal information impairs a clear statement on whether resistance mutations bring about increased gametocytogenesis. Due to methodology the resistance genotype of asexual parasites cannot be separated from that of gametocytes.

Despite these difficulties in drawing firm conclusions, several previous findings support the hypothesis of a linkage disequilibrium between mutations associated with SP resistance and CQ resistance. Early reports from the 1950s and 1960s indicated that in areas or patients with established pyrimethamine-resistance in Nigeria, Burkina Faso, and Venezuela, CQ exhibited a reduced activity (reviewed in [25]). In a murine malaria model, CQ resistance could be induced in pyrimethamine-resistant parasites but not in sensitive ones [11]. In isolates from Cameroon, the in vitro activity of pyrimethamine was ten times lower in CQ resistant than in sensitive P. falciparum [13]. Similar but less pronounced differences have also been observed in other studies [26,27]. In southern Ghana, we previously observed that the dhfr core mutation Asn-108 was three times more likely found in isolates exhibiting crt T76 than in isolates comprising crt wildtype parasites [7]. The reason for this apparent association between resistance to CQ and pyrimethamine or SP is obscure since both drugs have distinct modes of action and resistance to these is determined by mutations on different chromosomes [8-10]. One alluringly simple explanation could be that parasites in the study area have merely become resistant to both drugs, possibly as a result of drug pressure. In this regard, previous, simultaneous or sequential treatment with CQ and SP could have selected for resistant parasites which subsequently persisted for a longer period than the drugs can be detected in blood. However, pyrimethamine was seen in only two children which indicates that it is rarely used in this community and which argues against drug-induced selection for SP resistance. In addition, the results are corrected for the presence of CQ in blood which can be detected for approximately one month after intake [28]. This does not exclude the possibility of selected and persisting parasites but renders it rather unlikely. Alternatively, the association between crt T76 and dhfr mutations could reflect a rapid mutator phenotype with the ability of accelerated resistance to multiple drugs. This hypothesis originates from in vitro studies observing that parasites resistant to common antimalarials acquire resistance to structurally unrelated drugs more rapidly than susceptible strains. The genetic basis of this phenomenon is unknown but suggested to involve an increased frequency of mutations per se and consequently a higher probability of modified proteins which could also include drug targets [12]. In fact, selection for high-grade pyrimethamine resistance in vitro has been shown to enhance the degree of overall genomic polymorphism [29]. In this regard, it is noteworthy that crt T76 was more frequently observed with increasing number of dhfr mutations, i.e. with increasing degree of SP resistance.

In the present study, the association between the resistance markers meets with an increased presence of gametocytes in isolates comprising mutant dhfr or crt alleles. Gametocytaemia seemed to reflect a rather long duration of infection as can be deduced from its low prevalence in the presence of factors suggestive for acute disease, i.e. high body temperature and parasite density, and previous CQ treatment (Tab. 2). Again, an increased frequency of resistance mutations in gametocytaemic children could result from previous drug-related selection as outlined above. However, increased gametocytaemia preceding treatment has also been observed in infections subsequently found to be CQ resistant [30-32]. Hallett et al. [15] reported that in patients with crt T76 parasites, gametocyte density was highly increased one week following CQ treatment. In addition, gametocytes from patients carrying crt T76 parasites produced 38 times higher oocyst burdens in the mosquito as compared to crt wildtype parasites. In Tamale, both residual CQ levels and parasites with the crt T76 mutation are abundant [33], and a clear association of crt T76 and pre-treatment gametocyte prevalence is seen. Only one crt wildtype isolate contained gametocytes impairing a sound analysis of the effect of crt T76 on gametocyte density. However, increased gametocyte production by crt T76 parasites [15] in the presence of residual CQ could partially explain the present finding. The synthesis of both, crt and dhfr mutations being associated and increased gametocytaemia in their presence, gives rise to a grim scenario: Given that CQ resistant parasites have an improved transmission potential [15] the association with SP resistance would contribute to an accelerating spread of resistance to both drugs, particularly in areas where CQ resistance is frequent. In the present study, neither selection of crt T76 in SP treatment failure was observed nor a significantly elevated proportion of post-treatment gametocytaemia among children initially harbouring crt T76 parasites. Although this was not expected and would reflect an extraordinary rapid process, both observations may be influenced by the small sample size.

Conclusion

The present data provide evidence supporting a hypothesis on a connection between resistance to CQ and SP suggesting that both, CQ and SP resistance favour transmission. This needs to be verified by carefully designed longitudinal studies in regions of differing levels of drug resistance and endemicity. Per se, antimalarial treatment must be effective, and more effective than CQ and SP, not only to reduce treatment failures but also the transmission of potential co-resistance. Eventually, as this has been shown to counterbalance enhanced transmission of resistant parasites [15] the results strongly support combinatory treatment including artemisinine-derivatives.

Authors' contributions

FPM, JTB, and UB designed the study. RNO, SE and FPM were responsible for patient recruitment, clinical and parasitological examinations, and PCR assays. TAE measured drug concentrations. JTB and RWS did the gametocyte counts. FPM and JTB wrote the paper with major contributions of the other authors.

Acknowledgments

Acknowledgements

We thank the children who participated in this study and their parents as well as the members of the Northern Region Malaria Project (NORMAP). Part of this study was funded by the World Health Organization (EPH/CSR, M50-181-9).

Contributor Information

Frank P Mockenhaupt, Email: frank.mockenhaupt@charite.de.

J Teun Bousema, Email: T.Bousema@ncmls.kun.nl.

Teunis A Eggelte, Email: t.a.eggelte@amc.uva.nl.

Stephan Ehrhardt, Email: ehrhardt@bni-hamburg.de.

Rowland N Otchwemah, Email: rotchwemah@yahoo.com.

Robert W Sauerwein, Email: r.sauerwein@mmb.umcn.nl.

Ulrich Bienzle, Email: ulrich.bienzle@charite.de.

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