Cargando…

Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women

BACKGROUND: Recombination between strains of HIV-1 only occurs in individuals with multiple infections, and the incidence of recombinant forms implies that multiple infection is common. Most direct studies indicate that multiple infection is rare. We determined the rate of multiple infection in a lo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Templeton, Alan R, Kramer, Melissa G, Jarvis, Joseph, Kowalski, Jeanne, Gange, Stephen, Schneider, Michael F, Shao, Qiujia, Zhang, Guang Wen, Yeh, Mei-Fen, Tsai, Hua-Ling, Zhang, Hong, Markham, Richard B
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2700066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19493346
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-54
_version_ 1782168566762569728
author Templeton, Alan R
Kramer, Melissa G
Jarvis, Joseph
Kowalski, Jeanne
Gange, Stephen
Schneider, Michael F
Shao, Qiujia
Zhang, Guang Wen
Yeh, Mei-Fen
Tsai, Hua-Ling
Zhang, Hong
Markham, Richard B
author_facet Templeton, Alan R
Kramer, Melissa G
Jarvis, Joseph
Kowalski, Jeanne
Gange, Stephen
Schneider, Michael F
Shao, Qiujia
Zhang, Guang Wen
Yeh, Mei-Fen
Tsai, Hua-Ling
Zhang, Hong
Markham, Richard B
author_sort Templeton, Alan R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Recombination between strains of HIV-1 only occurs in individuals with multiple infections, and the incidence of recombinant forms implies that multiple infection is common. Most direct studies indicate that multiple infection is rare. We determined the rate of multiple infection in a longitudinal study of 58 HIV-1 positive participants from The Women's Interagency HIV Study with a richer sampling design than previous direct studies, and we investigated the role of recombination and sampling design on estimating the multiple infection rate. RESULTS: 40% of our sample had multiple HIV-1 infections. This rate of multiple infection is statistically consistent with previous studies once differences in sampling design are taken into account. Injection drug use significantly increased the incidence of multiple infections. In general there was rapid elimination of secondary strains to undetectable levels, but in 3 cases a superinfecting strain displaced the initial infecting strain and in two cases the strains coexisted throughout the study. All but one secondary strain was detected as an inter- and/or intra-genic recombinant. Injection drug use significantly increased the rate of observed recombinants. CONCLUSION: Our multiple infection rate is consistent with rates estimated from the frequency of recombinant forms of HIV-1. The fact that our results are also consistent with previous direct studies that had reported a much lower rate illustrates the critical role of sampling design in estimating this rate. Multiple infection and recombination significantly add to the genetic diversity of HIV-1 and its evolutionary potential, and injection drug use significantly increases both.
format Text
id pubmed-2700066
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27000662009-06-23 Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women Templeton, Alan R Kramer, Melissa G Jarvis, Joseph Kowalski, Jeanne Gange, Stephen Schneider, Michael F Shao, Qiujia Zhang, Guang Wen Yeh, Mei-Fen Tsai, Hua-Ling Zhang, Hong Markham, Richard B Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: Recombination between strains of HIV-1 only occurs in individuals with multiple infections, and the incidence of recombinant forms implies that multiple infection is common. Most direct studies indicate that multiple infection is rare. We determined the rate of multiple infection in a longitudinal study of 58 HIV-1 positive participants from The Women's Interagency HIV Study with a richer sampling design than previous direct studies, and we investigated the role of recombination and sampling design on estimating the multiple infection rate. RESULTS: 40% of our sample had multiple HIV-1 infections. This rate of multiple infection is statistically consistent with previous studies once differences in sampling design are taken into account. Injection drug use significantly increased the incidence of multiple infections. In general there was rapid elimination of secondary strains to undetectable levels, but in 3 cases a superinfecting strain displaced the initial infecting strain and in two cases the strains coexisted throughout the study. All but one secondary strain was detected as an inter- and/or intra-genic recombinant. Injection drug use significantly increased the rate of observed recombinants. CONCLUSION: Our multiple infection rate is consistent with rates estimated from the frequency of recombinant forms of HIV-1. The fact that our results are also consistent with previous direct studies that had reported a much lower rate illustrates the critical role of sampling design in estimating this rate. Multiple infection and recombination significantly add to the genetic diversity of HIV-1 and its evolutionary potential, and injection drug use significantly increases both. BioMed Central 2009-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2700066/ /pubmed/19493346 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-54 Text en Copyright © 2009 Templeton et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Templeton, Alan R
Kramer, Melissa G
Jarvis, Joseph
Kowalski, Jeanne
Gange, Stephen
Schneider, Michael F
Shao, Qiujia
Zhang, Guang Wen
Yeh, Mei-Fen
Tsai, Hua-Ling
Zhang, Hong
Markham, Richard B
Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title_full Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title_fullStr Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title_full_unstemmed Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title_short Multiple-infection and recombination in HIV-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
title_sort multiple-infection and recombination in hiv-1 within a longitudinal cohort of women
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2700066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19493346
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-54
work_keys_str_mv AT templetonalanr multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT kramermelissag multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT jarvisjoseph multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT kowalskijeanne multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT gangestephen multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT schneidermichaelf multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT shaoqiujia multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT zhangguangwen multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT yehmeifen multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT tsaihualing multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT zhanghong multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen
AT markhamrichardb multipleinfectionandrecombinationinhiv1withinalongitudinalcohortofwomen