回顾 MrsFreqPhase 方法:旨在统计估计疟原虫感染倍数、相关性、频率和阶段的方法。

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Aimee R Taylor, Eric Neubauer Vickers, Bryan Greenhouse
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引用次数: 0

摘要

疟原虫在人体内是单倍体,但感染后往往会出现基因不同的克隆寄生虫群。当每次感染的不同基因克隆数(即感染倍数,MOI)超过 1,且每次感染的基因数据是批量生成的,重要信息就会被混淆。例如,MOI、不同基因克隆的单倍体基因型阶段(即等位基因如何连接成序列)及其频率。这使得包括亲缘关系估计在内的许多下游分析变得复杂。在疟疾研究中,MOIs、寄生虫序列、它们的频率和亲缘关系程度被广泛使用:例如,用于监测抗疟疾药物的抗药性和追踪传播的变化。本文回顾了旨在统计估计疟原虫感染率、亲缘关系、频率和相位的 MrsFreqPhase 方法。文章对每一类方法进行了概述、文献的历史描述以及当代软件的统计描述。文章最后展望了未来的方法发展,以充分利用依赖 MrsFreqPhase 方法的前沿疟疾研究产生的新数据类型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Review of MrsFreqPhase methods: methods designed to estimate statistically malaria parasite multiplicity of infection, relatedness, frequency and phase.

Malaria parasites are haploid within humans, but infections often contain genetically distinct groups of clonal parasites. When the per-infection number of genetically distinct clones (i.e., the multiplicity of infection, MOI) exceeds one, and per-infection genetic data are generated in bulk, important information are obfuscated. For example, the MOI, the phases of the haploid genotypes of genetically distinct clones (i.e., how the alleles concatenate into sequences), and their frequencies. This complicates many downstream analyses, including relatedness estimation. MOIs, parasite sequences, their frequencies, and degrees of relatedness are used ubiquitously in malaria studies: for example, to monitor anti-malarial drug resistance and to track changes in transmission. In this article, MrsFreqPhase methods designed to estimate statistically malaria parasite MOI, relatedness, frequency and phase are reviewed. An overview, a historical account of the literature, and a statistical description of contemporary software is provided for each method class. The article ends with a look towards future method development, needed to make best use of new data types generated by cutting-edge malaria studies reliant on MrsFreqPhase methods.

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来源期刊
Malaria Journal
Malaria Journal 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
23.30%
发文量
334
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Malaria Journal is aimed at the scientific community interested in malaria in its broadest sense. It is the only journal that publishes exclusively articles on malaria and, as such, it aims to bring together knowledge from the different specialities involved in this very broad discipline, from the bench to the bedside and to the field.
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