Regional Plasmodium falciparum subpopulations and malaria transmission connectivity in Africa detected with an enlarged panel of genome-wide microsatellite loci

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Abstract

Unravelling the genetic diversity of Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasite provides critical information on how populations are affected by interventions and the environment, especially the evolution of molecular markers associated with parasite fitness and adaptation to drugs and vaccines. This study expands previous studies based on small sets of microsatellite loci, which often showed limited substructure in African populations of P. falciparum . Combining several short tandem repeat detection algorithms, we genotyped and analysed 2329 polymorphic microsatellite loci from next-generation sequences of 992 low-complexity P . falciparum isolates from 15 sub-Saharan African countries. Based on pairwise relatedness, we identified seven subpopulations and gene flow between the Central and Eastern African populations. The most divergent subpopulation was from Ethiopia, while unexpected unique subpopulations from Gabon and Malawi were resolved. Isolates from the Democratic Republic of Congo shared ancestry with multiple regional populations, suggesting a possible founder population of P. falciparum from the Congo basin, where there was stronger geneflow eastwards to Tanzania, and Kenya. and Malawi. The most differentiated microsatellite loci were those around the P. falciparum dihydropteroate synthase ( Pfdhps ) gene associated with sulphadoxine resistance. Haplotypes around the Pfdhps gene separated the West, Central, and East Africa parasite populations into distinct clusters, suggesting independent local evolution of Pfdhps -associated sulphadoxine resistance alleles in each African region. Overall, this study presents genome-wide microsatellites as markers for resolving P. falciparum population diversity, structure, and evolution in populations like Africa, where there is high gene flow.

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