Sunday, 4 September 2016 to Wednesday, 7 September 2016
Schedule : Back to Jean-Claude Dujardin
Poster
138

L. donovani from the Indian Subcontinent is pre-adapted for a rapid development of antimonial resistance, driven by aneuploidy

Authors

J C Dujardin2; F Dumetz2; H Imamura2; B Cuypers2; M Domagalska2; S Rijal1; G De Muylder21 BPKIHS, Dharan, Nepal;  2 Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

Discussion

In a previous phylogenomic study of L. donovani in the Indian subcontinent (ISC), we identified molecular events likely involved in SSG resistance, like an intra-chromosomal amplification (ICA) of the H- and MAPK1-loci and a 2-nt indel in AQP1 gene. We experimentally selected here Sb3-resistance in 3 ISC reference strains (A, ICA-neg, B and C, ICA-pos and respectively SSG-resistant and -sensitive). Initial Sb3 sensitivity of B-C promastigotes was 10 times lower than A. Time-to-resistance was shorter for B-C (4 cycles) than A (7 cycles). All quadruplicates of B-C reached the last cycle but only 1 replicate of A was recovered at the final concentration. At genomic level there were no local CNV, no indel and very few SNPs (only in A); in contrast, chromosomal copy number increased (noteworthy in chr 23, carrying H-locus), aneuploidy being more pronounced in A. Metabolomic results are currently integrated and will be presented.  B-C parasites (main ISC population) are likely pre-adapted to antimonials and the gene dosage effect of ICA is multiplied by aneuploidy, while resistance seems harder to acquire for A (highland genotype).     

Hosted By

British Society for Parasitology (BSP)

We are science based Charitable Incorporated Organisation

Get the App

Get this event information on your mobile by
going to the Apple or Google Store and search for 'myEventflo'
iPhone App
Android App
www.myeventflo.com/1904