1. Short communication: phylodynamics analysis of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope gene in mother and child pairs.
- Author
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Santos LA, Gray RR, Monteiro-Cunha JP, Strazza E, Kashima S, Santos Ede S, Araújo TH, Gonçalves Mde S, Salemi M, and Alcantara LC
- Subjects
- Adult, Bayes Theorem, Brazil, Child, Child, Preschool, Evolution, Molecular, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Phylogeny, Sequence Alignment, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Zambia, Genes, env, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Characterizing the impact of HIV transmission routes on viral genetic diversity can improve the understanding of the mechanisms of virus evolution and adaptation. HIV vertical transmission can occur in utero, during delivery, or while breastfeeding. The present study investigated the phylodynamics of the HIV-1 env gene in mother-to-child transmission by analyzing one chronically infected pair from Brazil and three acutely infected pairs from Zambia, with three to five time points. Sequences from 25 clones from each sample were obtained and aligned using Clustal X. ML trees were constructed in PhyML using the best evolutionary model. Bayesian analyses testing the relaxed and strict molecular clock were performed using BEAST and a Bayesian Skyline Plot (BSP) was construed. The genetic variability of previously described epitopes was investigated and compared between each individual time point and between mother and child sequences. The relaxed molecular clock was the best-fitted model for all datasets. The tree topologies did not show differentiation in the evolutionary dynamics of the virus circulating in the mother from the viral population in the child. In the BSP, the effective population size was more constant in time in the chronically infected patients while in the acute patients it was possible to detect bottlenecks. The genetic variability within viral epitopes recognized by the human immune system was considerably higher among the chronically infected pair in comparison with acutely infected pairs. These results contribute to a better understanding of HIV-1 evolutionary dynamics in mother-to-child transmission.
- Published
- 2015
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