Disparate Co-Evolution And Prevalence Of Sulfadoxine And Pyrimethamine Resistance Alleles And Haplotypes At dhfr And dhps Genes Across Africa
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Scientific Reports
Abstract
Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), despite emergence of mutations in dhfr and dhps genes associated
with lower treatment efficacy, is still recommended for preventive malaria treatment. Therefore, it is
important to understand the evolution of P. falciparum dhfr and dhps genes. We used the MalariaGEN
Pf7 dataset to describe haplotype frequencies across 22 African countries, including changes over
time in The Gambia, Mali, Ghana, and Kenya. We show that the triple mutant of dhfr, N51I/C59R/
S108N, has remained the dominant haplotype across the continent with limited evidence of additional
mutations. There is greater variation for dhps in terms of haplotype diversity and spatial heterogeneity
of haplotypes found across Africa. Although samples from Madagascar have low genetic differentiation
from samples from mainland East Africa at the whole genome level, we show that dhps K540E is
highly differentiated between the two populations, being at very low frequency in Madagascar (4%).
Whole genome data reveal 12 SNPs which are also highly differentiated between Madagascar and East
Africa, including aat1 and a possible novel drug resistance locus approximately 20 kb 3’ of mdr1. We
highlight the value of longitudinal sampling and whole genome sequence data for understanding the
heterogeneity and ongoing changes in anti-malarial drug resistance genetic markers.
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Research Article
Citation
White, N. F., Whitton, G., Wasakul, V., Amenga-Etego, L., Dara, A., Andrianaranjaka, V., ... & Amambua-Ngwa, A. (2025). Disparate co-evolution and prevalence of sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine resistance alleles and haplotypes at dhfr and dhps genes across Africa. Scientific Reports, 15(1), 13222.
