Scientific journal paper Q1
Genetic diversity and population structure of Plasmodium falciparum over space and time in an African archipelago
Patrícia Salgueiro (salgueiro, P.); Vicente J (Vicente J); Figueiredo R. (Figueiredo R.); PintoJ (PintoJ);
Journal Title
Infection, Genetics and Evolution
Year (definitive publication)
2016
Language
English
Country
United States of America
More Information
Web of Science®

Times Cited: 6

(Last checked: 2024-11-22 22:54)

View record in Web of Science®


: 0.2
Scopus

Times Cited: 4

(Last checked: 2024-11-19 09:05)

View record in Scopus


: 0.2
Google Scholar

Times Cited: 8

(Last checked: 2024-11-19 08:19)

View record in Google Scholar

Abstract
The archipelago of São Tomé and Principe (STP), West Africa, has suffered the heavy burden of malaria since the 16th century. Until the last decade, when after a successful control program STP has become a low transmission country and one of the few nations with decreases of more than 90% in malaria admission and death rates. We carried out a longitudinal study to determine the genetic structure of STP parasite populations over time and space. Twelve microsatellite loci were genotyped in Plasmodium falciparum samples from two islands collected in 1997, 2000 and 2004. Analysis was performed on proportions of mixed genotype infections, allelic diversity, population differentiation, effective population size and bottleneck effects. We have found high levels of genetic diversity and minimal inter-population genetic differentiation typical of African continental regions with intense and stable malaria transmission. We detected significant differences between the years, with special emphasis for 1997 that showed the highest proportion of samples infected with P. falciparum and the highest mean number of haplotypes per isolate. This study establishes a comprehensive genetic data baseline of a pre-intervention scenario for future studies; taking into account the most recent and successful control intervention on the territory.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
  • Biological Sciences - Natural Sciences
  • Other Medical Sciences - Medical and Health Sciences

With the objective to increase the research activity directed towards the achievement of the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, the possibility of associating scientific publications with the Sustainable Development Goals is now available in Ciência-IUL. These are the Sustainable Development Goals identified by the author(s) for this publication. For more detailed information on the Sustainable Development Goals, click here.