Cargando…

Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.

We systematically evaluated multiple and recombinant infections in an HIV-infected population selected for vaccine trials. Seventy-nine HIV-1 infected persons in a clinical cohort study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were evaluated for 1 year. A combination of molecular screening assays and DNA sequenci...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ramos, A, Tanuri, A, Schechter, M, Rayfield, M A, Hu, D J, Cabral, M C, Bandea, C I, Baggs, J, Pieniazek, D
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2627691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10081673
_version_ 1782163575349968896
author Ramos, A
Tanuri, A
Schechter, M
Rayfield, M A
Hu, D J
Cabral, M C
Bandea, C I
Baggs, J
Pieniazek, D
author_facet Ramos, A
Tanuri, A
Schechter, M
Rayfield, M A
Hu, D J
Cabral, M C
Bandea, C I
Baggs, J
Pieniazek, D
author_sort Ramos, A
collection PubMed
description We systematically evaluated multiple and recombinant infections in an HIV-infected population selected for vaccine trials. Seventy-nine HIV-1 infected persons in a clinical cohort study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were evaluated for 1 year. A combination of molecular screening assays and DNA sequencing showed 3 dual infections (3.8%), 6 recombinant infections (7.6%), and 70 (88.6%) infections involving single viral subtypes. In the three dual infections, we identified HIV-1 subtypes F and B, F and D, and B and D; in contrast, the single and recombinant infections involved only HIV-1 subtypes B and F. The recombinants had five distinct B/F mosaic patterns: Bgag-p17/Bgag-p24/Fpol/Benv, Fgag-p17/Bgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv, Bgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv, Bgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Benv, and Fgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv. No association was found between dual or recombinant infections and demographic or clinical variables. These findings indicate that dual and recombinant infections are emerging as an integral part of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Brazil and emphasize the heterogenous character of epidemics emerging in countries where multiple viral subtypes coexist.
format Text
id pubmed-2627691
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1999
publisher Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-26276912009-05-20 Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil. Ramos, A Tanuri, A Schechter, M Rayfield, M A Hu, D J Cabral, M C Bandea, C I Baggs, J Pieniazek, D Emerg Infect Dis Research Article We systematically evaluated multiple and recombinant infections in an HIV-infected population selected for vaccine trials. Seventy-nine HIV-1 infected persons in a clinical cohort study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were evaluated for 1 year. A combination of molecular screening assays and DNA sequencing showed 3 dual infections (3.8%), 6 recombinant infections (7.6%), and 70 (88.6%) infections involving single viral subtypes. In the three dual infections, we identified HIV-1 subtypes F and B, F and D, and B and D; in contrast, the single and recombinant infections involved only HIV-1 subtypes B and F. The recombinants had five distinct B/F mosaic patterns: Bgag-p17/Bgag-p24/Fpol/Benv, Fgag-p17/Bgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv, Bgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv, Bgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Benv, and Fgag-p17/B-Fgag-p24/Fpol/Fenv. No association was found between dual or recombinant infections and demographic or clinical variables. These findings indicate that dual and recombinant infections are emerging as an integral part of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Brazil and emphasize the heterogenous character of epidemics emerging in countries where multiple viral subtypes coexist. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1999 /pmc/articles/PMC2627691/ /pubmed/10081673 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is a publication of the U.S. Government. This publication is in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from this work may be reprinted freely. Use of these materials should be properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ramos, A
Tanuri, A
Schechter, M
Rayfield, M A
Hu, D J
Cabral, M C
Bandea, C I
Baggs, J
Pieniazek, D
Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title_full Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title_fullStr Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title_full_unstemmed Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title_short Dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the HIV-1 epidemic in Brazil.
title_sort dual and recombinant infections: an integral part of the hiv-1 epidemic in brazil.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2627691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10081673
work_keys_str_mv AT ramosa dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT tanuria dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT schechterm dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT rayfieldma dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT hudj dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT cabralmc dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT bandeaci dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT baggsj dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil
AT pieniazekd dualandrecombinantinfectionsanintegralpartofthehiv1epidemicinbrazil