1. High HIV-1 genetic diversity in Cuba.
- Author
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Cuevas MT, Ruibal I, Villahermosa ML, Díaz H, Delgado E, Parga EV, Pérez-Alvarez L, de Armas MB, Cuevas L, Medrano L, Noa E, Osmanov S, Nájera R, and Thomson MM
- Subjects
- Cuba epidemiology, Databases, Genetic, Female, Genes, pol, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 genetics, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 classification, Humans, Male, Peptide Fragments genetics, Phylogeny, Genetic Variation, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Background: HIV-1 subtype B is largely predominant in the Caribbean, although other subtypes have been recently identified in Cuba., Objectives: To examine HIV-1 genetic diversity in Cuba., Methods: The study enrolled 105 HIV-1-infected individuals, 93 of whom had acquired the infection in Cuba. DNA from peripheral blood mononuclear cells was used for polymerase chain reaction amplification and sequencing of pol (protease-reverse transcriptase) and env (V3 region) segments. Phylogenetic trees were constructed using the neighbour-joining method. Intersubtype recombination was analysed by bootscanning., Results: Of the samples, 50 (48%) were of subtype B and 55 (52%) of diverse non-B subtypes and recombinant forms. Among non-B viruses, 12 were non-recombinant, belonging to six subtypes (C, D, F1, G, H and J), the most frequent of which was subtype G (n = 5). The remaining 43 (78%) non-B viruses were recombinant, with 14 different forms, the two most common of which were Dpol/Aenv (n = 21) and U(unknown)pol/Henv (n = 7), which grouped in respective monophyletic clusters. Twelve recombinant viruses were mosaics of different genetic forms circulating in Cuba. Overall, 21 genetic forms were identified, with all known HIV-1 group M subtypes present in Cuba, either as non-recombinant viruses or as segments of recombinant forms. Non-B subtype viruses were predominant among heterosexuals (72%) and B subtype viruses among homo- or bisexuals (63%)., Conclusion: An extraordinarily high diversity of HIV-1 genetic forms, unparalleled in the Americas and comparable to that found in Central Africa, is present in Cuba.
- Published
- 2002
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