PCR-based karyotyping of Anopheles gambiae inversion 2 Rj identifies the BAMAKO chromosomal form

Abstract Background The malaria vector Anopheles gambiae is polymorphic for chromosomal inversions on the right arm of chromosome 2 that segregate nonrandomly between assortatively mating populations in West Africa. One such inversion, 2Rj, is associated with the BAMAKO chromosomal form endemic to s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Malaria Journal
Main Authors: Conway David J, Simard Frédéric, Kern Marcia, Fofana Abdrahamane, Dia Ibrahima, Konate Lassana, Nwakanma Davis, Jawara Musa, Caputo Beniamino, Pombi Marco, Coulibaly Mamadou B, Petrarca Vincenzo, Torre Alessandra, Traoré Sékou, Besansky Nora J
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-6-133
https://doaj.org/article/9196bb744d3546f693c3c2f4cefa92bb
Description
Summary:Abstract Background The malaria vector Anopheles gambiae is polymorphic for chromosomal inversions on the right arm of chromosome 2 that segregate nonrandomly between assortatively mating populations in West Africa. One such inversion, 2Rj, is associated with the BAMAKO chromosomal form endemic to southern Mali and northern Guinea Conakry near the Niger River. Although it exploits a unique ecology and both molecular and chromosomal data suggest reduced gene flow between BAMAKO and other A. gambiae populations, no molecular markers exist to identify this form. Methods To facilitate study of the BAMAKO form, a PCR assay for molecular karyotyping of 2Rj was developed based on sequences at the breakpoint junctions. The assay was extensively validated using more than 700 field specimens whose karyotypes were determined in parallel by cytogenetic and molecular methods. As inversion 2Rj also occurs in SAVANNA populations outside the geographic range of BAMAKO, samples were tested from Senegal, Cameroon and western Guinea Conakry as well as from Mali. Results In southern Mali, where 2Rj polymorphism in SAVANNA populations was very low and most of the 2Rj homozygotes were found in BAMAKO karyotypes, the molecular and cytogenetic methods were almost perfectly congruent. Elsewhere agreement between the methods was much poorer, as the molecular assay frequently misclassified 2Rj heterozygotes as 2R+ j standard homozygotes. Conclusion Molecular karyotyping of 2Rj is robust and accurate on 2R+ j standard and 2Rj inverted homozygotes. Therefore, the proposed approach overcomes the lack of a rapid tool for identifying the BAMAKO form across developmental stages and sexes, and opens new perspectives for the study of BAMAKO ecology and behaviour. On the other hand, the method should not be applied for molecular karyotyping of j-carriers within the SAVANNA chromosomal form.