Chemotherapy of rodent malaria: transfer of resistance vs mutation |
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Authors: | C Schoenfeld H Most N Entner |
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Affiliation: | Department of Preventive Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York, New York 10016 USA |
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Abstract: | Pyrimethamine-resistant strains of Plasmodium berghei and P. vinckei were produced by exposing populations of erythrocytic parasites to the selection pressure of increasing doses of drug as well as by single-step mutations. Pyrimethamine-sensitive parasites of both rodent plasmodia were found to mutate at a rate of 1–2 × 10?11 when exposed to a single course of drug therapy, consisting of 15 mg/kg/day for 4 consecutive days, given subcutaneously. Resistance obtained by either method, was found to be stabile for at least 40 passages in the absence of drug pressure, the longest number of passages tested. Parasites exposed to 15 mg/ kg/day were also found to be resistant to 160 mg/kg/day, the maximum dose of pyrimethamine tolerated by the rodent host.Plasmodium berghei chloroquine-sensitive parasites were found to have a mutation rate of 1.5 × 10?10, when exposed to a single course of chloroquine therapy, consisting of 30 mg/kg/day chloroquine base given for 4 consecutive days, subcutaneously. These parasites were also found to be resistant to 60 mg/kg/day the highest dose of chloroquine tolerated by the rodent host. Chloroquine-resistant strains of P. vinckei could not be developed by a single-step mutation nor by selection by slow increases in drug pressure.Pyrimethamine-resistant strains of P. berghei, whether, the resistance was developed by single-step mutation, or by slowly increasing the pyrimethamine doses over extended periods of time, demonstrated dihydrofolate reductases which were similar in activity, Michaelis constants, and inability to be stimulated by increased concentrations of KCl. The same was found to be true for the dihydrofolate reductases (EC 1.5.1.3) isolated from pyrimethamine-resistant P. vinckei strains. The enzymes isolated from the resistant strains differed in all respects from their sensitive counterparts.Attempts at drug resistance-transfer, using both a biological filter system, and a dual drug resistant system, were both unsuccessful. The origin of all drug resistant strains studied and reported in this paper, can best be explained by the occurrence of mutation, most probably involving the change of a single nucleotide base in the DNA. |
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Keywords: | Address reprint requests to: Dr. C. Schoenfeld 137 East 36 Street New York N. Y. 10016. |
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