4.5 Article

Genetic Indicators of Drug Resistance in the Highly Repetitive Genome of Trichomonas vaginalis

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 1658-1672

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evx110

Keywords

Trichomonas vaginalis; sexually transmitted infection; comparative genomics; genetic association study; antimicrobial drug resistance

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI097080]
  2. MacCracken Program in the New York University Graduate School of Arts and Science
  3. Fleur Strand Fellowship
  4. New York University Gallatin Undergraduate Research Fund award
  5. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Research Fund [CMRPD3D0181-3]

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Trichomonas vaginalis, the most common nonviral sexually transmitted parasite, causes similar to 283 million trichomoniasis infections annually and is associated with pregnancy complications and increased risk of HIV-1 acquisition. The antimicrobial drug metronidazole is used for treatment, but in a fraction of clinical cases, the parasites can become resistant to this drug. We undertook sequencing of multiple clinical isolates and lab derived lines to identify genetic markers and mechanisms of metronidazole resistance. Reduced representation genome sequencing of similar to 100T. vaginalis clinical isolates identified 3,923 SNP markers and presence of a bipartite population structure. Linkage disequilibrium was found to decay rapidly, suggesting genome-wide recombination and the feasibility of genetic association studies in the parasite. We identified 72 SNPs associated with metronidazole resistance, and a comparison of SNPswithin several lab-derived resistant lines revealed an overlap with the clinically resistant isolates. We identified SNPs in genes for which no function has yet been assigned, as well as in functionally-characterized genes relevant to drug resistance (e.g., pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase). Transcription profiles of resistant strains showed common changes in genes involved in drug activation (e.g., flavin reductase), accumulation (e.g., multidrug resistance pump), and detoxification (e.g., nitroreductase). Finally, we identified convergent genetic changes in lab-derived resistant lines of Tritrichomonas foetus, a distantly related species that causes venereal disease in cattle. Shared genetic changes within and between T. vaginalis and Tr. foetus parasites suggest conservation of the pathways through which adaptation has occurred. These findings extend our knowledge of drug resistance in the parasite, providing a panel of markers that can be used as a diagnostic tool.

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