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High GUD Incidence in the Early 20th Century Created a Particularly Permissive Time Window for the Origin and Initial Spread of Epidemic HIV Strains
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 4, p e9936 (2010), PLoS ONE
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2010.
-
Abstract
- The processes that permitted a few SIV strains to emerge epidemically as HIV groups remain elusive. Paradigmatic theories propose factors that may have facilitated adaptation to the human host (e.g., unsafe injections), none of which provide a coherent explanation for the timing, geographical origin, and scarcity of epidemic HIV strains. Our updated molecular clock analyses established relatively narrow time intervals (roughly 1880-1940) for major SIV transfers to humans. Factors that could favor HIV emergence in this time frame may have been genital ulcer disease (GUD), resulting in high HIV-1 transmissibility (4-43%), largely exceeding parenteral transmissibility; lack of male circumcision increasing male HIV infection risk; and gender-skewed city growth increasing sexual promiscuity. We surveyed colonial medical literature reporting incidences of GUD for the relevant regions, concentrating on cities, suffering less reporting biases than rural areas. Coinciding in time with the origin of the major HIV groups, colonial cities showed intense GUD outbreaks with incidences 1.5-2.5 orders of magnitude higher than in mid 20 th century. We surveyed ethnographic literature, and concluded that male circumcision frequencies were lower in early 20(th) century than nowadays, with low rates correlating spatially with the emergence of HIV groups. We developed computer simulations to model the early spread of HIV-1 group M in Kinshasa before, during and after the estimated origin of the virus, using parameters derived from the colonial literature. These confirmed that the early 20(th) century was particularly permissive for the emergence of HIV by heterosexual transmission. The strongest potential facilitating factor was high GUD levels. Remarkably, the direct effects of city population size and circumcision frequency seemed relatively small. Our results suggest that intense GUD in promiscuous urban communities was the main factor driving HIV emergence. Low circumcision rates may have played a role, probably by their indirect effects on GUD. ispartof: PLoS One vol:5 issue:4 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Subjects :
- Male
Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Evolutionary Biology/Sexual Behavior
Public Health and Epidemiology/Infectious Diseases
HIV Infections
Disease
male circumcision
Microbiology/Microbial Evolution and Genomics
Multidisciplinary
Incidence
Incidence (epidemiology)
virus diseases
Haplorhini
control programs
Infectious Diseases/HIV Infection and AIDS
Virology/Virus Evolution and Symbiosis
Microbiology/Immunity to Infections
Evolutionary Biology/Human Evolution
Genital ulcer
Promiscuity
Virology/Viral Replication and Gene Regulation
Virology/Immunodeficiency Viruses
Medicine
Female
medicine.symptom
Research Article
Pan troglodytes
Science
Evolutionary Biology/Evolutionary Ecology
congo suggests
Biology
Virology/Emerging Viral Diseases
human-immunodeficiency-virus
geographical-distribution
Infectious Diseases/Sexually Transmitted Diseases
medicine
Animals
Humans
urban communities
Computer Simulation
Permissive
Epidemics
Ulcer
sexually-transmitted-diseases
Evolutionary Biology/Animal Behavior
Outbreak
History, 20th Century
genome sequences
medicine.disease
Virology
Circumcision, Male
sub-saharan africa
group-o
Syphilis
Public Health and Epidemiology/Epidemiology
Rural area
Genital Diseases, Female
Demography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cce1a382916cd8d5cf704fa6c9b83083
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009936