High-Throughput Genotyping of Plasmodium vivax in the Peruvian Amazon via Molecular Inversion Probes

This article has been Reviewed by the following groups

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

Log in to save this article

Abstract

Plasmodium vivax transmission occurs throughout the tropics and is an emerging threat in areas of Plasmodium falciparum decline, causing relapse infections that complicate treatment and control. Targeted sequencing for P. falciparum has been widely deployed to detect population structure and the geographic spread of antimalarial and diagnostic resistance. However, there are fewer such tools for P. vivax . Leveraging global variation data, we designed four molecular inversion probe (MIP) genotyping panels targeting geographically differentiating SNPs, neutral SNPs, putative antimalarial resistance genes, and vaccine candidate genes. We deployed these MIP panels on 866 infections from the Peruvian Amazon and identified transmission networks with clonality (IBD>0.99), copy number variation in Pvdbp and multiple Pvrbps , fixation of putative antimalarial resistance, and balancing selection in 13 vaccine candidate genes. Our MIP panels are the broadest genotyping panel currently available and are poised for successful deployment in other regions of P. vivax transmission.

Article activity feed

  1. Fabian Saenz

    Review 1: "High-Throughput Genotyping of Plasmodium vivax in the Peruvian Amazon via Molecular Inversion Probes"

    Overall, the reviewer valued the population data but found insufficient evidence comparing MIPs with other methods to support the authors' claims about the technique's superiority.