| Literature DB >> 10484750 |
M Yamashita1, R Veronesi, M Menna-Barreto, W J Harrington, C Sampio, C Brites, R Badaro, A S Andrade-Filho, S Okhura, T Igarashi, J Takehisa, T Miura, D Chamone, O Bianchini, C Jardim, S Sonoda, M Hayami.
Abstract
To better understand the origin of human T-cell leukemia virus type l (HTLV-l) in South America, we conducted a phylogenetic study on 27 new HTLV-ls in Brazil. These were obtained from Brazilians of various ethnic origins, such as Japanese immigrants, whites, blacks and mulattos. We amplified and sequenced proviral DNAs of a part of the long terminal repeats. Phylogenetic trees revealed that all but 6 of the new isolates were not only similar to each other but also similar to HTLV-ls of other South American countries, including those from Amerindians. However, the isolates differed from the HTLV-ls of Africa and Japan. The other six isolates were from Japanese immigrants and were phylogenetically almost identical to HTLV-ls in Japan but different from the majority of South American HTLV-ls, including the other new Brazilian HTLV-ls. These findings indicate that the recent introduction of HTLV-1 from Japan is limited to Japanese immigrants. In addition, the results do not support the prevailing hypothesis that HTLV-ls in South America were introduced by blacks who were brought from Africa as slaves. Rather, these results suggest that the majority of HTLV-1s prevailing in South America have spread from Amerindians, some of whom are likely to have possessed this human retrovirus from the beginning of their settlement in South America.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10484750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virology ISSN: 0042-6822 Impact factor: 3.616