Literature DB >> 15525322

AIDS as a zoonosis? Confusion over the origin of the virus and the origin of the epidemics.

Preston A Marx1, Cristian Apetrei, Ernest Drucker.   

Abstract

Based on findings demonstrating the simian ancestry of HIV, AIDS has been reported to be a zoonosis. However, this theory has never been proved and must seriously be questioned. Several arguments show that HIV-AIDS is not a zoonosis. (i) If AIDS were a zoonosis, there must be evidence of AIDS being directly acquired from an animal species, as is rabies, a disease that is directly acquired from animals. (ii) Despite long-term and frequent human exposure to SIV-infected monkeys in Africa, only 11 cross-species transmission events are known, and only four of these have resulted in significant human-to-human transmission, generating HIV-1 groups M and O and HIV-2 groups A and B. The closest relatives of SIVcpz (HIV-1 group N) and of SIVsm (HIV-2 groups C-H) are extremely rare, with only six HIV-1 group N-infected patients and only single individuals known to be infected by HIV-2 groups C-H. SIV, while capable of cross-species transmission, is thus poorly adapted for disease and epidemic spread. If AIDS were a zoonosis that is capable of significant human-to-human spread, there would be a plethora of founder subtypes and groups. (iii) Human exposure to SIV is thousands of years old, but AIDS emerged only in the 20th century. If AIDS were a zoonosis that spread into the human population, it would have spread to the West during slave trade. (iv) Experimental transmission of SIVs to different species of monkeys is often well controlled by the new host, showing that the virus and not the disease is transmitted. Therefore, we conclude that cross-species transmission of SIV does not in itself constitute the basis for a zoonosis. Transmission per se is not the major requirement for the generation of the AIDS epidemic. All HIVs do derive from simian species, but AIDS does not qualify as a zoonosis and this explanation cannot in itself account for the origin of AIDS epidemic. It is important to distinguish AIDS from true zoonoses (e.g. rabies) because research is needed to understand the processes by which animal viruses cause sustained human-to-human transmission, epidemics and even pandemics. Much is known about emerging viruses, but almost nothing is known about emerging viral diseases.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15525322     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0684.2004.00078.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Primatol        ISSN: 0047-2565            Impact factor:   0.667


  8 in total

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2.  A distinct lineage of influenza A virus from bats.

Authors:  Suxiang Tong; Yan Li; Pierre Rivailler; Christina Conrardy; Danilo A Alvarez Castillo; Li-Mei Chen; Sergio Recuenco; James A Ellison; Charles T Davis; Ian A York; Amy S Turmelle; David Moran; Shannon Rogers; Mang Shi; Ying Tao; Michael R Weil; Kevin Tang; Lori A Rowe; Scott Sammons; Xiyan Xu; Michael Frace; Kim A Lindblade; Nancy J Cox; Larry J Anderson; Charles E Rupprecht; Ruben O Donis
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-02-27       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  Going wild: lessons from naturally occurring T-lymphotropic lentiviruses.

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Review 5.  Simian immunodeficiency virus infection of chimpanzees.

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6.  AIDS: caused by development of resistance to drugs in a non-target intracellular parasite.

Authors:  George E Parris
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7.  Global Dynamics of a Virus Dynamical Model with Cell-to-Cell Transmission and Cure Rate.

Authors:  Tongqian Zhang; Xinzhu Meng; Tonghua Zhang
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Review 8.  Aspects on the history of transmission and favor of distribution of viruses by iatrogenic action: perhaps an example of a paradigm of the worldwide spread of HIV.

Authors:  Lutz G Gürtler; Josef Eberle
Journal:  Med Microbiol Immunol       Date:  2017-04-22       Impact factor: 3.402

  8 in total

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