Worobey Michael, Watts Thomas D, McKay Richard A, Suchard Marc A, Granade Timothy, Teuwen Dirk E, Koblin Beryl A, Heneine Walid, Lemey Philippe, Jaffe Harold W
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.
Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3RH, UK.
Nature. 2016 Nov 3;539(7627):98-101. doi: 10.1038/nature19827. Epub 2016 Oct 26.
The emergence of HIV-1 group M subtype B in North American men who have sex with men was a key turning point in the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Phylogenetic studies have suggested cryptic subtype B circulation in the United States (US) throughout the 1970s and an even older presence in the Caribbean. However, these temporal and geographical inferences, based upon partial HIV-1 genomes that postdate the recognition of AIDS in 1981, remain contentious and the earliest movements of the virus within the US are unknown. We serologically screened >2,000 1970s serum samples and developed a highly sensitive approach for recovering viral RNA from degraded archival samples. Here, we report eight coding-complete genomes from US serum samples from 1978-1979-eight of the nine oldest HIV-1 group M genomes to date. This early, full-genome 'snapshot' reveals that the US HIV-1 epidemic exhibited extensive genetic diversity in the 1970s but also provides strong evidence for its emergence from a pre-existing Caribbean epidemic. Bayesian phylogenetic analyses estimate the jump to the US at around 1970 and place the ancestral US virus in New York City with 0.99 posterior probability support, strongly suggesting this was the crucial hub of early US HIV/AIDS diversification. Logistic growth coalescent models reveal epidemic doubling times of 0.86 and 1.12 years for the US and Caribbean, respectively, suggesting rapid early expansion in each location. Comparisons with more recent data reveal many of these insights to be unattainable without archival, full-genome sequences. We also recovered the HIV-1 genome from the individual known as 'Patient 0' (ref. 5) and found neither biological nor historical evidence that he was the primary case in the US or for subtype B as a whole. We discuss the genesis and persistence of this belief in the light of these evolutionary insights.
北美男男性行为者中HIV-1 M组B亚型的出现是艾滋病大流行的一个关键转折点。系统发育研究表明,在整个20世纪70年代,美国存在隐匿的B亚型传播,在加勒比地区的存在时间甚至更早。然而,这些基于1981年艾滋病被确认之后的部分HIV-1基因组所做的时间和地理推断仍存在争议,而且该病毒在美国境内的最早传播情况尚不清楚。我们对2000多个20世纪70年代的血清样本进行了血清学筛查,并开发了一种从降解的存档样本中回收病毒RNA的高灵敏度方法。在此,我们报告了1978 - 1979年美国血清样本中的8个编码完整基因组,这是迄今为止9个最古老的HIV-1 M组基因组中的8个。这一早期的全基因组“快照”显示,20世纪70年代美国的HIV-1疫情呈现出广泛的遗传多样性,但也为其源自先前存在的加勒比地区疫情提供了有力证据。贝叶斯系统发育分析估计,该病毒于1970年左右传入美国,并以0.99的后验概率支持将美国的祖先病毒定位在纽约市,这强烈表明纽约市是美国早期HIV/AIDS多样化的关键中心。逻辑增长合并模型显示,美国和加勒比地区的疫情倍增时间分别为0.86年和1.12年,表明每个地区在早期都有快速扩张。与更多近期数据的比较表明,如果没有存档的全基因组序列,许多这些见解是无法获得的。我们还从被称为“0号病人”(参考文献5)的个体中回收了HIV-1基因组,并未发现生物学或历史证据表明他是美国或整个B亚型的首例病例。我们根据这些进化见解讨论了这种观点的起源和持续存在情况。