RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Genome-wide analysis of ivermectin response by Onchocerca volvulus reveals that genetic drift and soft selective sweeps contribute to loss of drug sensitivity JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 094540 DO 10.1101/094540 A1 Stephen R. Doyle A1 Catherine Bourguinat A1 Hugues C. Nana-Djeunga A1 Jonas A. Kengne-Ouafo A1 Sébastien D.S. Pion A1 Jean Bopda A1 Joseph Kamgno A1 Samuel Wanji A1 Hua Che A1 Annette C. Kuesel A1 Martin Walker A1 Maria-Gloria Basáñez A1 Daniel A. Boakye A1 Mike Y. Osei-Atweneboana A1 Michel Boussinesq A1 Roger K. Prichard A1 Warwick N. Grant YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/16/094540.abstract AB Background Treatment of onchocerciasis using mass ivermectin administration has reduced morbidity and transmission throughout Africa and Central/South America. Mass drug administration is likely to exert selection pressure on parasites, and phenotypic and genetic changes in several Onchocerca volvulus populations from Cameroon and Ghana - exposed to more than a decade of regular ivermectin treatment - have raised concern that sub-optimal responses to ivermectin’s anti-fecundity effect are becoming more frequent and may spread.Methodology/Principal Findings Pooled next generation sequencing (Pool-seq) was used to characterise genetic diversity within and between 108 adult female worms differing in ivermectin treatment history and response. Genome-wide analyses revealed genetic variation that significantly differentiated good responder (GR) and sub-optimal responder (SOR) parasites. These variants were not randomly distributed but clustered in ~31 quantitative trait loci (QTLs), with little overlap in putative QTL position and gene content between countries. Published candidate ivermectin SOR genes were largely absent in these regions; QTLs differentiating GR and SOR worms were enriched for genes in molecular pathways associated with neurotransmission, development, and stress responses. Finally, single worm genotyping demonstrated that geographic isolation and genetic change over time (in the presence of drug exposure) had a significantly greater role in shaping genetic diversity than the evolution of SOR.Conclusions/Significance This study is one of the first genome-wide association analyses in a parasitic nematode, and provides insight into the genomics of ivermectin response and population structure of O. volvulus. We argue that ivermectin response is a polygenically-determined quantitative trait in which identical or related molecular pathways but not necessarily individual genes likely determine the extent of ivermectin response in different parasite populations. Furthermore, we propose that genetic drift rather than genetic selection of SOR is the underlying driver of population differentiation, which has significant implications for the emergence and potential spread of SOR within and between these parasite populations.Author summary Onchocerciasis is a human parasitic disease endemic across large areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, where more that 99% of the estimated 100 million people globally at-risk live. The microfilarial stage of Onchocerca volvulus causes pathologies ranging from mild itching to visual impairment and ultimately, irreversible blindness. Mass administration of ivermectin kills microfilariae and has an anti-fecundity effect on adult worms by temporarily inhibiting the development in utero and/or release into the skin of new microfilariae, thereby reducing morbidity and transmission. Phenotypic and genetic changes in some parasite populations that have undergone multiple ivermectin treatments in Cameroon and Ghana have raised concern that sub-optimal response to ivermectin’s anti-fecundity effect may increase in frequency, reducing the impact of ivermectin-based control measures. We used next generation sequencing of small pools of parasites to define genome-wide genetic differences between phenotypically characterised good and sub-optimal responder parasites from Cameroon and Ghana, and identified multiple genomic regions differentiating the response types. These regions were largely different between parasites from both countries but revealed common molecular pathways that might be involved in determining the extent of response to ivermectin’s anti-fecundity effect. These data reveal a more complex than previously described pattern of genetic diversity among O. volvulus populations that differ in their geography and response to ivermectin treatment.CDTIcommunity-directed treatment with ivermectinGRgood respondersHWEHardy-Weinberg equilibriumKSKolmogorov-SmirnovMDSmultidimensional scalingNLTnaïve or little treatedQTquantitative traitQTLquantitative trait lociSDstandard deviationSNPsingle nucleotide polymorphismSORsub-optimal responders