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Origin of HIV-1 in the chimpanzee Pan troglodytes troglodytes

  1. Author:
    Gao, F.
    Bailes, E.
    Robertson, D. L.
    Chen, Y. L.
    Rodenburg, C. M.
    Michael, S. F.
    Cummins, L. B.
    Arthur, L. O.
    Peeters, M.
    Shaw, G. M.
    Sharp, P. M.
    Hahn, B. H.
  2. Author Address

    Hahn BH Univ Alabama, Dept Med & Microbiol 701 S 19th St,LHRB 613 Birmingham, AL 35294 USA Univ Alabama, Dept Med & Microbiol Birmingham, AL 35294 USA Univ Nottingham, Queens Med Ctr, Inst Genet Nottingham NG7 2UH England CNRS, Lab Struct & Genet Informat F-13402 Marseille France SW Fdn Biomed Res San Antonio, TX 78245 USA NCI, AIDS Vaccine Program, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, SAIC Frederick Ft Detrick, MD 21702 USA ORSTOM, Retrovirus Lab F-34032 Rennes France Univ Alabama, Howard Hughes Med Inst Birmingham, AL 35294 USA
    1. Year: 1999
  1. Journal: Nature
    1. 397
    2. 6718
    3. Pages: 436-441
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The human AIDS viruses human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and type 2 (HIV-2) represent cross-species (zoonotic) infections(1-4). Although the primate reservoir of HIV-2 has been clearly identified as the sooty mangabey (Cercocebus atys)(2,4-7), the origin of HIV-1 remains uncertain. Viruses related to HIV-1 have been isolated from the common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)(8,9), but only three such SIVcpz infections have been documented(1,10,11), one of which involved a virus so divergent(11) that it might represent a different primate lentiviral lineage. In a search for the HIV-1 reservoir, rye have now sequenced the genome of a new SIVcpz strain (SIVcpzUS) and have determined, by mitochondrial DNA analysis, the subspecies identity of all known SIVcpz-infected chimpanzees. We find that two chimpanzee subspecies in Africa, the central P. t. troglodytes and the eastern P. t. schweinfurthii, harbour SIVcpz and that their respective viruses form two highly divergent (but subspecies-specific) phylogenetic lineages. All HIV-1 strains known to infect man, including HIV-1 groups M, N and O, are closely related to just one of these SIVcpz lineages, that found in P. t. troglodytes. Moreover, we find that HIV-1 group N is a mosaic of SIVcpzUS- and HTV-1-related sequences, indicating an ancestral recombination event in a chimpanzee host. These results, together with the observation that the natural range of P. t. troglodytes coincides uniquely with areas of HIV-1 group M, N and O endemicity, indicate that P. t. troglodytes is the primary reservoir for HIV-I and has been the source of at least three independent introductions of SIVcpz into the human population. [References: 28]

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