Pedro Cravo
Universidade Federal de Goiás
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Featured researches published by Pedro Cravo.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006
Ana Afonso; Paul Hunt; Sandra Cheesman; Ana Catarina Alves; Celso Cunha; V. E. Do Rosario; Pedro Cravo
ABSTRACT Resistance of Plasmodium falciparum to drugs such as chloroquine and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine is a major problem in malaria control. Artemisinin (ART) derivatives, particularly in combination with other drugs, are thus increasingly used to treat malaria, reducing the probability that parasites resistant to the components will emerge. Although stable resistance to artemisinin has yet to be reported from laboratory or field studies, its emergence would be disastrous because of the lack of alternative treatments. Here, we report for the first time, to our knowledge, genetically stable and transmissible ART and artesunate (ATN)-resistant malaria parasites. Each of two lines of the rodent malaria parasite Plosmodium chabaudi chabaudi, grown in the presence of increasing concentrations of ART or ATN, showed 15-fold and 6-fold increased resistance to ART and ATN, respectively. Resistance remained stable after cloning, freeze-thawing, after passage in the absence of drug, and transmission through mosquitoes. The nucleotide sequences of the possible genetic modulators of ART resistance (mdr1, cg10, tctp, and atp6) of sensitive and resistant parasites were compared. No mutations in these genes were identified. In addition we investigated whether changes in the copy number of these genes could account for resistance but found that resistant parasites retained the same number of copies as their sensitive progenitors. We believe that this is the first report of a malaria parasite with genetically stable and transmissible resistance to artemisinin or its derivatives.
Molecular Microbiology | 2007
Paul Hunt; Ana Afonso; Alison M. Creasey; Richard Culleton; Amar Bir Singh Sidhu; John G Logan; Stephanie G. Valderramos; Iain W. McNae; Sandra Cheesman; Virgílio E. do Rosário; Richard Carter; David A. Fidock; Pedro Cravo
Artemisinin‐ and artesunate‐resistant Plasmodium chabaudi mutants, AS‐ART and AS‐ATN, were previously selected from chloroquine‐resistant clones AS‐30CQ and AS‐15CQ respectively. Now, a genetic cross between AS‐ART and the artemisinin‐sensitive clone AJ has been analysed by Linkage Group Selection. A genetic linkage group on chromosome 2 was selected under artemisinin treatment. Within this locus, we identified two different mutations in a gene encoding a deubiquitinating enzyme. A distinct mutation occurred in each of the clones AS‐30CQ and AS‐ATN, relative to their respective progenitors in the AS lineage. The mutations occurred independently in different clones under drug selection with chloroquine (high concentration) or artesunate. Each mutation maps to a critical residue in a homologous human deubiquitinating protein structure. Although one mutation could theoretically account for the resistance of AS‐ATN to artemisinin derivates, the other cannot account solely for the resistance of AS‐ART, relative to the responses of its sensitive progenitor AS‐30CQ. Two lines of Plasmodium falciparum with decreased susceptibility to artemisinin were also selected. Their drug‐response phenotype was not genetically stable. No mutations in the UBP‐1 gene encoding the P. falciparum orthologue of the deubiquitinating enzyme were observed. The possible significance of these mutations in parasite responses to chloroquine or artemisinin is discussed.
Trends in Parasitology | 2001
Jane M.-R. Carlton; Karen Hayton; Pedro Cravo; David Walliker
It is well recognized that drug resistance is the most significant obstacle to gaining effective malaria control. Despite the enormous advances in the knowledge of the biochemistry and molecular biology of malaria parasites, only a few genes determining resistance to the commonly used drugs have been identified. The idea that rodent malaria parasites should be exploited more widely for such work, in view of the practical problems of studying this subject experimentally in human malaria, is presented.
Malaria Journal | 2008
Richard Culleton; Toshihiro Mita; Mathieu Ndounga; Holger Unger; Pedro Cravo; Giacomo Maria Paganotti; Nobuyuki Takahashi; Akira Kaneko; Hideaki Eto; Halidou Tinto; Corine Karema; Umberto D'Alessandro; Virgílio E. do Rosário; Takatoshi Kobayakawa; Francine Ntoumi; Richard Carter; Kazuyuki Tanabe
BackgroundPlasmodium vivax is estimated to affect 75 million people annually. It is reportedly absent, however, from west and central Africa due to the high prevalence of the Duffy negative phenotype in the indigenous populations. Despite this, non-African travellers consistently return to their own countries with P. vivax malaria after visiting this region. An attempt was made, therefore, to detect the presence of P. vivax parasites in blood samples collected from the indigenous populations of west and central Africa.MethodsParasite species typing (for all four human malaria parasites) was carried out by PCR on 2,588 blood samples collected from individuals from nine African malaria-endemic countries.ResultsMost infections (98.5%) were Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium malariae was identified in 8.5% of all infections, and Plasmodium ovale in 3.9%. The prevalence of both parasites varied greatly by country. Only one case of P. vivax was detected from Sao Tome, an island off the west coast of Africa, confirming the scarcity of this parasite in Africa.ConclusionThe prevalence of P. vivax in local populations in sub-Saharan Africa is very low, despite the frequent identification of this parasite in non-African travellers.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2008
Blandine Franke-Fayard; D. Djokovic; Maaike W. van Dooren; Jai Ramesar; Andrew P. Waters; M.O. Falade; Michel Kranendonk; Axel Martinelli; Pedro Cravo; Chris J. Janse
We report two improved assays for in vitro and in vivo screening of chemicals with potential anti-malarial activity against the blood stages of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodiumberghei. These assays are based on the determination of luciferase activity (luminescence) in small blood samples containing transgenic blood stage parasites that express luciferase under the control of a promoter that is either schizont-specific (ama-1) or constitutive (eef1alphaa). Assay 1, the in vitro drug luminescence (ITDL) assay, measured the success of schizont maturation in the presence of candidate drugs quantifying luciferase activity in mature schizonts only (ama-1 promoter). The ITDL assay generated drug-inhibition curves and EC(50) values comparable to those obtained with standard in vitro drug-susceptibility assays. The second assay, the in vivo drug-luminescence (IVDL) assay, measured parasite growth in vivo in a standard 4-day suppressive drug test, monitored by measuring the constitutive luciferase activity of circulating parasites (eef1alphaa promoter). The IVDL assay generates growth-curves that are identical to those obtained by manual counting of parasites in Giemsa-stained smears. The reading of luminescence assays is rapid, requires a minimal number of handling steps and no experience with parasite morphology or handling fluorescence-activated cell sorters, produces no radioactive waste and test-plates can be stored for prolonged periods before processing. Both tests are suitable for use in larger-scale in vitro and in vivo screening of drugs. The standard methodology of anti-malarial drug screening and validation, which includes testing in rodent models of malaria, can be improved by the incorporation of such assays.
BMC Genomics | 2010
Paul Hunt; Axel Martinelli; Katarzyna Modrzynska; Sofia T. Borges; Alison M. Creasey; Louise Rodrigues; Dario Beraldi; Laurence Loewe; Richard Fawcett; Sujai Kumar; Marian Thomson; Urmi Trivedi; Thomas D. Otto; Arnab Pain; Mark Blaxter; Pedro Cravo
BackgroundClassical and quantitative linkage analyses of genetic crosses have traditionally been used to map genes of interest, such as those conferring chloroquine or quinine resistance in malaria parasites. Next-generation sequencing technologies now present the possibility of determining genome-wide genetic variation at single base-pair resolution. Here, we combine in vivo experimental evolution, a rapid genetic strategy and whole genome re-sequencing to identify the precise genetic basis of artemisinin resistance in a lineage of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium chabaudi. Such genetic markers will further the investigation of resistance and its control in natural infections of the human malaria, P. falciparum.ResultsA lineage of isogenic in vivo drug-selected mutant P. chabaudi parasites was investigated. By measuring the artemisinin responses of these clones, the appearance of an in vivo artemisinin resistance phenotype within the lineage was defined. The underlying genetic locus was mapped to a region of chromosome 2 by Linkage Group Selection in two different genetic crosses. Whole-genome deep coverage short-read re-sequencing (Illumina® Solexa) defined the point mutations, insertions, deletions and copy-number variations arising in the lineage. Eight point mutations arise within the mutant lineage, only one of which appears on chromosome 2. This missense mutation arises contemporaneously with artemisinin resistance and maps to a gene encoding a de-ubiquitinating enzyme.ConclusionsThis integrated approach facilitates the rapid identification of mutations conferring selectable phenotypes, without prior knowledge of biological and molecular mechanisms. For malaria, this model can identify candidate genes before resistant parasites are commonly observed in natural human malaria populations.
Molecular and Cellular Probes | 2003
José Pedro Gil; Fátima Nogueira; J. Strömberg-Nörklit; J. Lindberg; M. Carrolo; C. Casimiro; Dinora Lopes; Ana Paula Arez; Pedro Cravo; V.E. Rosário
Clinical treatment failures of the hydroxynaphthoquinone atovaquone or its combination with proguanil (Malarone) in Plasmodium falciparum malaria has been recently documented. These events have been associated to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the parasite cytochrome b gene (cytb). In this report we describe a set of nest PCR-RFLP methods developed for the fast detection of all known cytb mutations associated to resistance to these drugs. The methods were successfully applied for the analysis of phenol-chloroform extracted DNA samples from patients not cured by Malarone, and from an established parasite clone. Further, the protocol for the detection of the A803C mutation was applied to 164 DNA field samples extracted through crude methanol-based protocols, originated from several malaria settings. The PCR-RFLP methods here presented can be used as a valuable for the clinical detection and study of Malarone and atovaquone P. falciparum resistance.
Malaria Journal | 2002
Dinora Lopes; Kanchana Rungsihirunrat; Fátima Nogueira; Aree Seugorn; José Pedro Gil; Virgílio E. do Rosário; Pedro Cravo
BackgroundThe increasing levels of Plasmodium falciparum resistance to chloroquine (CQ) in Thailand have led to the use of alternative antimalarials, which are at present also becoming ineffective. In this context, any strategies that help improve the surveillance of drug resistance, become crucial in overcoming the problem.MethodsIn the present study, we have established the in vitro sensitivity to CQ, mefloquine (MF), quinine (QUIN) and amodiaquine (AMQ) of 52 P. falciparum isolates collected in Thailand, and assessed the prevalence of four putative genetic polymorphisms of drug resistance, pfcrt K76T, pfmdr1 N86Y, pfmdr1 D1042N and pfmdr1 Y1246D, by PCR-RFLP.ResultsThe percentage of isolates resistant to CQ, MF, and AMQ was 96% (50/52), 62% (32/52), and 58% (18/31), respectively, while all parasites were found to be sensitive to QUIN. In addition, 41 (79%) of the isolates assayed were resistant simultaneously to more than one drug; 25 to CQ and MF, 9 to CQ and AMQ, and 7 to all three drugs, CQ, MF and AMQ. There were two significant associations between drug sensitivity and presence of particular molecular markers, i) CQ resistance / pfcrt 76T (P = 0.001), and ii) MF resistance / pfmdr1 86N (P < 0.001)Conclusionsi) In Thailand, the high levels of CQ pressure have led to strong selection of the pfcrt 76T polymorphism and ii) pfmdr1 86N appears to be a good predictor of in vitro MF resistance.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Ronan Jambou; Axel Martinelli; João Pinto; Simonetta Gribaldo; Eric Legrand; Makhtar Niang; Nimol Kim; Lim Pharath; Béatrice Volnay; Marie Therese Ekala; Christiane Bouchier; Thierry Fandeur; Pedro Berzosa; Agustín Benito; Isabel Ferreira; C. Ferreira; Pedro Paulo Vieira; Maria das Graças Costa Alecrim; Odile Mercereau-Puijalon; Pedro Cravo
Artemisinin, a thapsigargin-like sesquiterpene has been shown to inhibit the Plasmodium falciparum sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium-ATPase PfSERCA. To collect baseline pfserca sequence information before field deployment of Artemisinin-based Combination therapies that may select mutant parasites, we conducted a sequence analysis of 100 isolates from multiple sites in Africa, Asia and South America. Coding sequence diversity was large, with 29 mutated codons, including 32 SNPs (average of one SNP/115 bp), of which 19 were novel mutations. Most SNP detected in this study were clustered within a region in the cytosolic head of the protein. The PfSERCA functional domains were very well conserved, with non synonymous mutations located outside the functional domains, except for the S769N mutation associated in French Guiana with elevated IC50 for artemether. The S769N mutation is located close to the hinge of the headpiece, which in other species modulates calcium affinity and in consequence efficacy of inhibitors, possibly linking calcium homeostasis to drug resistance. Genetic diversity was highest in Senegal, Brazil and French Guiana, and few mutations were identified in Asia. Population genetic analysis was conducted for a partial fragment of the gene encompassing nucleotide coordinates 87-2862 (unambiguous sequence available for 96 isolates). This supported a geographic clustering, with a separation between Old and New World samples and one dominant ancestral haplotype. Genetic drift alone cannot explain the observed polymorphism, suggesting that other evolutionary mechanisms are operating. One possible contributor could be the frequency of haemoglobinopathies that are associated with calcium dysregulation in the erythrocyte.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2008
Isabel D. Ferreira; Axel Martinelli; Louise Rodrigues; Ediclei Lima do Carmo; Virgílio E. do Rosário; Marinete Marins Póvoa; Pedro Cravo
Objective To evaluate the in vitro efficacy of artesunate (ATN) and artemether (ATH) against Plasmodium falciparum isolates from the Brazilian Amazon state of Pará and to search for mutations and/or altered copy numbers in the putative resistance‐associated pfcrt, pfmdr1 and pfATPase6 genes.