PMID: 8952898Jan 1, 1996Paper

Mechanisms and epidemiology of resistances to antimalarials

Comptes rendus des séances de la Société de biologie et de ses filiales
J Le BrasP E de Pécoulas

Abstract

Drug resistant malaria is mostly due to Plasmodium falciparum, a species highly prevalent in tropical Africa, Amazonia and South-East Asia and responsible for severe involvement of fever or anemia prompting more than a million death per year. Resistance originate from chromosomic mutations. Antimetabolite-resistant mutants (pyrimethamine and proguanil) are highly prevalent in Asia, America and East Africa. One to 3 point mutations on the dihydrofolate-reductase gene, the target enzyme, give moderate to high level of resistance. Molecular biology furnishes sensitive tools for population-based studies of resistance to these compounds. Four-aminoquinolines resistant mutants (chloroquine and amodiaquine) were encountered more than 10 years after a huge amount of these drugs has been sold. The level of resistance varies among parasites isolates populations. Impaired uptake of the drug by the parasite vacuole is a common characteristic of resistant strains. This phenotype is poorly correlated with PfMDR1 gene mutations on chromosome 5 but is strongly associated with a particular RFLP profile on chromosome 7. Amino-alcohol resistant falciparum malaria is scarce (quinine, mefloquine, halofantrine) and supposed to be associated with imp...Continue Reading

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