Vidal N, Peeters M, Mulanga-Kabeya C, Nzilambi N, Robertson D, Ilunga W, Sema H, Tshimanga K, Bongo B, Delaporte E
Laboratoire Retrovirus, IRD, Montpellier, France.
J Virol. 2000 Nov;74(22):10498-507. doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.22.10498-10507.2000.
The purpose of this study was to document the genetic diversity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC; formerly Zaire). A total of 247 HIV-1-positive samples, collected during an epidemiologic survey conducted in 1997 in three regions (Kinshasa [the capital], Bwamanda [in the north], and Mbuyi-Maya [in the south]), were genetically characterized in the env V3-V5 region. All known subtypes were found to cocirculate, and for 6% of the samples the subtype could not be identified. Subtype A is predominant, with prevalences decreasing from north to south (69% in the north, 53% in the capital city, and 46% in the south). Subtype C, D, G, and H prevalences range from 7 to 9%, whereas subtype F, J, K, and CRF01-AE strains represent 2 to 4% of the samples; only one subtype B strain was identified. The highest prevalence (25%) of subtype C was in the south, and CRF01-AE was seen mainly in the north. The high intersubtype variability among the V3-V5 sequences is the most probable reason for the low (45%) efficiency of subtype A-specific PCR and HMA (heteroduplex mobility assay). Eighteen (29%) of 62 samples had discordant subtype designations between env and gag. Sequence analysis of the entire envelope from 13 samples confirmed the high degree of diversity and complexity of HIV-1 strains in the DRC; 9 had a complex recombinant structure in gp160, involving fragments of known and unknown subtypes. Interestingly, the unknown fragments from the different strains did not cluster together. Overall, the high number of HIV-1 subtypes cocirculating, the high intrasubtype diversity, and the high numbers of possible recombinant viruses as well as different unclassified strains are all in agreement with an old and mature epidemic in the DRC, suggesting that this region is the epicenter of HIV-1 group M.
本研究的目的是记录刚果民主共和国(前扎伊尔)1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)的基因多样性。在1997年于三个地区(首都金沙萨、北部的布瓦曼达和南部的姆比伊-马亚)进行的一项流行病学调查期间收集的总共247份HIV-1阳性样本,在env V3-V5区域进行了基因特征分析。发现所有已知亚型均同时流行,6%的样本无法鉴定亚型。A亚型占主导地位,其流行率从北向南递减(北部为69%,首都为53%,南部为46%)。C、D、G和H亚型的流行率在7%至9%之间,而F、J、K和CRF01-AE亚型毒株占样本的2%至4%;仅鉴定出1株B亚型毒株。C亚型的最高流行率(25%)出现在南部,CRF01-AE主要出现在北部。V3-V5序列之间高度的亚型间变异性是A亚型特异性PCR和异源双链迁移率分析效率低(45%)的最可能原因。62份样本中有18份(29%)在env和gag之间的亚型命名不一致。对13份样本的整个包膜进行的序列分析证实了刚果民主共和国HIV-1毒株的高度多样性和复杂性;9份样本在gp160中有复杂的重组结构,涉及已知和未知亚型的片段。有趣的是,不同毒株的未知片段并未聚集在一起。总体而言,大量HIV-1亚型同时流行、亚型内的高度多样性、大量可能的重组病毒以及不同的未分类毒株均与刚果民主共和国古老且成熟的疫情相符,表明该地区是HIV-1 M组的中心。