Plasmodium vivax: Recent world expansion and genetic identity to Plasmodium simium
- *Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697; †Department of Laboratory Medicine, Brain Korea 21 Program for Biomedical Science, College of Medicine, Korea University, Seoul 425-707, Korea; and ‡Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602
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Contributed by Francisco J. Ayala, August 24, 2005
Abstract
Plasmodium vivax causes the most geographically widespread human malaria, accounting annually for 70-80 million clinical cases throughout the tropical and subtropical regions of the world's continents. We have analyzed the DNA sequences of the Csp (circumsporozoite protein) gene in 24 geographically representative strains of P. vivax and 2 of P. simium, which parasitizes several species of New World monkeys. The Csp sequences are of two types, VK210 and VK247, which differ by three diagnostic amino acid replacements, one in each of the 5′ and 3′ terminal regions [5′ nonrepeat (NR) and 3′ NR] of the gene and in an insertion sequence that precedes the 3′ NR region. The central region of the gene consists of ≈38 repetitive “motifs,” which are alternatively four and five amino acids long, which also are diagnostically different between the VK210 and VK247 types. There are very few synonymous substitutions within and between the two types of strains, which we hypothesize reflects that the worldwide spread of P. vivax is very recent. The two P. simium Csp sequences belong one to each of the two VK types and are genetically indistinguishable from the corresponding P. vivax strains, suggesting that at least two host transfers have occurred between humans and New World monkeys. We exclude as unlikely the possibility that the two types of sequences could have independently arisen in humans and platyrrhines by natural selection. There are reasons favoring each of the two possible directions of host transfer between humans and monkeys.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fjayala{at}uci.edu.
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Author contributions: F.J.A. designed research; C.S.L. and L.T. performed research; C.S.L. and F.J.A. analyzed data; and C.S.L. and F.J.A. wrote the paper.
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Abbreviations: CR, central repeat; CSP, circumsporozoite protein; IR, insertion region; NR, nonrepeat; RAT, repeat allotypes.
- Copyright © 2005, The National Academy of Sciences





