Department of Medical Laboratory Technology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Haramaya University, Haramaya, Ethiopia. tamiratgw2002@yahoo.com <tamiratgw2002@yahoo.com>
BACKGROUND: Atovaquone is part of the antimalarial drug combination atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone) and inhibits the cytochrome bc1 complex of the electron transport chain in Plasmodium spp. Molecular modelling showed that amino acid mutations are clustered around a putative atovaquone-binding site resulting in a reduced binding affinity of atovaquone for plasmodial cytochrome b, thus resulting in drug resistance. METHODS: The prevalence of cytochrome b point mutations possibly conferring atovaquone resistance in Plasmodium falciparum isolates in atovaquone treatment-naïve patient cohorts from Lambaréné, Gabon and from South Western Ethiopia was assessed. RESULTS: Four/40 (10%) mutant types (four different single polymorphisms, one leading to an amino acid change from M to I in a single case) in Gabonese isolates, but all 141/141 isolates were wild type in Ethiopia were found. CONCLUSION: In the absence of drug pressure, spontaneous and possibly resistance-conferring mutations are rare.