Research Ideas and Outcomes :
Research Idea
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Corresponding author: Maame Ekua Acquah (acquahmaame@gmail.com)
Academic editor: Editorial Secretary
Received: 14 Feb 2024 | Accepted: 19 Mar 2024 | Published: 22 Mar 2024
© 2024 Maame Ekua Acquah, Frank Aboagye, Yvonne Ashong, Lydia Mosi
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Acquah ME, Aboagye F, Ashong Y, Mosi L (2024) Development of a field diagnostic tool for Schistosoma mansoni Praziquantel resistant markers in selected endemic communities. Research Ideas and Outcomes 10: e120899. https://doi.org/10.3897/rio.10.e120899
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Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease that affects more than 200 million people and 45% of infections have been shown to occur in school-aged children. A large percentage of the disease burden lies in Africa. In 2012, the WHO outlined a roadmap for the elimination of schistosomiasis by 2020; however, this was not achieved. Treatment for schistosomiasis is by the use of Praziquantel, a drug in use for over 30 years and there is a concern for emerging drug resistance. There are several species of the genus Schistosoma causing infection in humans. For this study, Schistosoma mansoni which causes intestinal schistosomiasis will be investigated. There are reports of lowering cure rates and suboptimal response to praziquantel following several cycles of mass drug administration (MDA). Praziquantel resistance has also been reported in some countries and laboratory-bred schistosome experiments. To address the concerns of resistance, this study aims to employ a two-part approach to assess the prevalence of S. mansoni. praziquantel resistance amongst school-aged children in schistosomiasis endemic communities in Ghana and develop a diagnostic tool to aid in field assessment of infections. To achieve this, the study will attempt to answer the following research questions: 1. Is there developing S. mansoni praziquantel resistance in communities that have undergone several mass drug administrations? 2. Is there an interplay between intermediate host exposure to praziquantel and the development of praziquantel drug resistance in the definitive host?
NTDs, neglected tropical diseases, PZQ resistance, diagnostic tool, schistosomiasis, MDA (Mass Drug Administration), CRISPR/Cas 9
Infection by blood flukes causes schistosomiasis. Five species of the genus Schistosoma infect humans: S. intercalatum, S. japonicum, S. mekongi, S. haematobium and S. mansoni. Schistosoma haematobium, S. mansoni and S. japonicum are the most prevalent species causing human infection (
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), infection occurs with exposure to schistosome cercariae-infested fresh water while engaging in mundane household, economic, recreational and agricultural activities (
The parasite has acomplex life cycle, depending on two hosts. That is, it relies on mammals and freshwater snails for the sexual and asexual phases of their life cycle, respectively. It begins with miracidia transformation into sporocyst then develops into cercariae to end the asexual stage in the snail. When mammals come in contact with cercariae, it penetrates the skin and sheds off the bifurcated tail, becoming schistosomula which then migrates via venous circulation to the lungs, develops into adult worms and exits the liver via the portal vein system (
The host’s tissue secretes enzymes that trigger inflammatory and granulomatous reactions around eggs lodged in the liver, CNS, urinary bladder, spleen and gut, resulting in intestinal, urogenital or hepatosplenic and neurological schistosomiasis (
In Ghana, information on S. mansoni is sparse due to under-reporting by infected people at health centres (
The WHO recommends the use of praziquantel (PZQ) for the treatment and control of schistosomiasis. Preventative chemotherapy is done by annual/bi-annual Mass Drug Administration (MDA) programmes in a dose of 40 mg/kg. The use of PZQ for MDAs in Sub-Saharan Africa began in 2003, in Ghana in 2008 and over 30 years in other parts of the world (
Schistosoma mansoni infection
S. mansoni infection in humans begins with bifurcated-tailed cercariae penetrating the skin and transforming into schistosomulum. This causes a host-enzymatic reaction, resulting in dermatitis. The larvae pairs, male and female, move from the skin and the worm matures in the liver, where they lodge in the mesenteric venules (
Infection can be acute or chronic. Acute schistosomiasis occurs during a new infection and may be void of clinical manifestations. However, some people may have symptoms like fever, anorexia, weakness, diarrhoea and bloody stools. Symptoms can easily be mistaken for other tropical diseases, like typhoid fever. The chronic phase occurs due to the parasite's ability to lodge in organs like the liver and intestines. Granulomas are observed when an acute phase progresses to a chronic phase (
Since 1954, there has been documented evidence of S. mansoni in Ghana. Infection was thought to be confined to Tarkwa and Bogoso in the west, Bawku and Wiaga near Navrongo and Nyive and Atikpui in the Volta Region. McCullough (1965) suggested that the disease would spread in the absence of strict control measures (
There is clear evidence of S. mansoni infection in Ghana with such serious pathological outcomes and this disease should be eliminated urgently. Despite ongoing MDA programmes with PZQ, researchers continue to detect S. mansoni in different study areas. It will be important to investigate if there is a developing resistance and suboptimal response to PZQ.
The success of experimental induction of resistance raises concerns over drug efficacy.
The mechanism of action of PZQ at the molecular level remains unknown, though it is widely used for schistosomiasis treatment. Praziquantel has been suggested to play a role in the muscular contraction and calcium influx of schistosomes (
Considering the wide use of Praziquantel as the exclusive treatment essential to reducing morbidities associated with schistosomiasis, emerging resistance is perturbing. Experimentally, resistance of S. mansoni to PZQ can be induced and demonstrated in the field, though this mechanism remains unclear (
To study PZQ resistance, it is essential to investigate genes that play a role in resistance mechanisms.
Reduced sensitivity to PZQ and resistance in S. mansoni can be observed at the morphological and molecular level, with several genes and proteins hypothesised to play roles in these mechanisms. However, the challenge remains for accurately using this information to monitor emerging resistance in the field.
There exist various methods that aid researchers in identifying laboratory-induced PZQ resistant strains.
Assessing the prevalence of praziquantel-resistant S. mansoni amongst school-aged children in schistosomiasis-endemic communities in Ghana and also developing a diagnostic tool to aid in field assessment of drug resistance.
In 2012, the WHO came up with a roadmap for eliminating NTDs, including schistosomiasis, by 2020. This was, however, not achieved and a new roadmap for 2030 has been drawn (
Complete cure rates following PZQ treatment are rare and field data on schistosomes becoming less sensitive to treatment increases (
Graphical Abstract. Adapted from
Study Design
In-silico search for genes associated with praziquantel resistance
An online search strategy to obtain genes associated with praziquantel resistance would be adopted. PubMed and google scholar databases would be used. The results will be reviewed to eliminate unsuitable hits. Table
Online search strategy for genes associated with praziquantel resistance.
Proposed Outcome |
Search Items |
Total References |
Selected References |
Final Selected |
After selection, genes would be screened to ascertain functional validity with bioinformatics tools, such as: DynaMut (
Ethical clearance would be obtained from the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research—Water Research Institute (CSIR-WRI), the Ethics Committee for Basic and Applied Sciences (ECBAS) and the Ghana Health Service.
A full outline of the study is summarised in Fig.
A total of 634 school-aged children (300 from Tomefa and 334 from Torgakope) would be sampled, based on S. mansoni prevalence rates (78% and 30%, respectively) in the
Kato-Katz and PCR will be run to determine S. mansoni positivity. DNA extraction (from stool samples and cercariae shed from snails) and qPCR will be run for S. mansoni and resistant genes detection. Isolated eggs from Kato-Katz-positive samples and shed miracidia would be used for downstream analysis.
The snails will be kept for 5 to 6 weeks and induced to shed cercariae once a week during this time period. Snails that do not shed cercariae after exposure time, will be artificially infected with S. mansoni miracidia and treated with PZQ. Infected snails and non-infected snails treated with PZQ would be compared for possible resistance markers. Eggs from Kato-Katz positive samples would be put in a 96-well plate and treated with different concentrations of PZQ. Mice would be infected with cercariae to generate Schistosomiasis definitive host models after which the models would be treated or not treated with PZQ. The treated versus untreated group of Shistosomiasis host models would be compared using eggs isolated from faecal material from mice. Treated versus untreated groups will also be compared using adult worms from the intestines of sacrificed mice. Groups of susceptible versus resistant would be compared with a gene panel from selected genes using qPCR as well as RNA-seq to identify novel differentially expressed genes for both in vitro and in vivo assays.
Gene Knock-in/Knock-out into the genome of the egg of Schistosoma mansoni will be executed via CRISPR-Cas9 with selected resistance markers and successful transfection will be assessed. Edited schistosome eggs will be hatched into miracidia, which will be used to infect snails and subsequently produce cercariae. The cercariae will be injected into the tails of experimental mice (CD1 male mice) and comparisons will be made between treated and untreated mice following PZQ treatment or its absence to gain a preliminary insight into the mechanism of PZQ resistance.
Colorimetric Loop-mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP) assay using six primers with one generic S. mansoni and two resistance gene markers would be developed. Validation of the generic outer primers will be done via PCR with CRISPR-Cas9 strains, crude stool extracts and purified extracted DNA. Primers will be designed with Explorer version 5. The colorimetric assay will be achieved by adding phenol and hydroxy naphthol blue with a pH change resulting in a colour change as an indication of positivity.
Crude egg extract from Kato-Katz detection on the field during the second sampling period would be used to carry out the field-testing assessment. Samples would also be collected and confirmed in the laboratory. Resistant samples would be sequenced to ascertain which genes mediate resistance and PCR with a resistance gene panel would also be carried out.
The prevalence of S. mansoni will be determined with its corresponding 95% confidence interval. The intensity of the S. mansoni infection will be determined by WHO guidelines (
PZQ-resistance would be scored as a binary trait such that parasites that recover from drug treatment are resistant and those that fail to recover are designated as susceptible. Field applicability of the developed tool would be measured via comparison to Kato Katz to determine positivity of crude samples using the tool and PCR with the resistance gene panel.
The complete workflow for the proposed methodology is summarised in Fig.
Maame Ekua Acquah: Conceptualisation, Writing and Drafting, Methodology, Idea development
Frank Twum Aboagye: Methodology, Review, Editing and Feedback, Idea development
Yvonne Ashong: Methodology Review and Feedback, Review and Editing, Contribution to Background and References
Lydia Mosi: Review and Feedback