Plasmodium falciparum quinine resistance is multifactorial and includes a role for the drug/metabolite transporters PfCRT and DMT1

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Abstract

The genetic basis of Plasmodium falciparum resistance to quinine (QN), a drug used to treat severe malaria, has long been enigmatic. To gain further insight, we used FRG-NOD human liver-chimeric mice to conduct a P. falciparum genetic cross between QN-resistant (Cam3.II) and QN-sensitive (NF54) parasites, which also differ in their susceptibility to chloroquine (CQ). By applying different selective conditions to progeny pools prior to cloning, we recovered 120 unique recombinant progeny. Drug profiling and quantitative trait loci analyses of the progeny revealed predominant peaks on chromosomes 7 and 12 associated with CQ and QN resistance, that is consistent with a multifactorial mechanism of resistance for these compounds. CQ and monodesethyl-CQ (md-CQ) resistance mapped to a chromosome 7 region harboring pfcrt as expected. However, for QN, resistance mapped to a dominant chromosome 7 peak centered 295 kb downstream of pfcrt, with pfcrt showing a smaller peak. We identified the drug/metabolite transporter 1 (DMT1) as the top chromosome 7 candidate due to its structural similarity to PfCRT and proximity to the peak. Deleting DMT1 in QN-resistant Cam3.II parasites significantly sensitized the parasite to QN but not to the other drugs tested, suggesting that DMT1 mediates QN response specifically. We localized DMT1 to structures associated with vesicular trafficking, as well as the parasitophorous vacuolar membrane, lipid bodies, and the digestive vacuole. We also observed that mutant DMT1 transports more QN than the wild-type isoform in vitro. Gene editing confirmed an additional role for mutant PfCRT in mediating QN resistance. In addition, we identified an ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease (FtsH1) as one of the top candidates in the chromosome 12 locus and confirmed its role as a potential mediator of QN resistance and a modulator of md-CQ resistance using CRISPR/Cas9 SNP-edited lines. Interestingly, this chromosome 12 region mapped to resistance to both CQ and QN and was preferentially co-inherited with pfcrt. Our study demonstrates that DMT1 is a novel marker of QN resistance and that a new chromosome 12 locus associates with CQ and QN response, with ftsh1 as a potential candidate, suggesting these genes in addition to pfcrt should be genotyped in surveillance and clinical settings.

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