Literature DB >> 15989463

Full-length HIV type 1 genome analysis showing evidence for HIV type 1 transmission from a nonprogressor to two recipients who progressed to AIDS.

Meriet Mikhail1, Bin Wang, Phillipe Lemey, Brenda Beckholdt, Anne-Mieke Vandamme, Michael John Gill, Nitin K Saksena.   

Abstract

Epidemiologically-linked HIV-1 transmission cohorts serve as excellent models to study HIV disease progression. The actual relationship between viral variability and HIV disease outcome can be extrapolated only through such rare epidemiologically linked HIV-1-infected cohorts. We present here a cohort of three patients with the source termed donor A (a nonprogressor) and two recipients B and C. Both recipients acquired HIV through blood transfusion from donor A and have progressed to AIDS. By analyzing 15 near full-length HIV- 1 genomes (8.7 kb each genome) from longitudinally collected peripheral blood cell samples (four time points for patient A, four for patient B, and seven from patient C), we were able to demonstrate transmission of HIV from donor A and epidemiologic linkage among members A, B, and C after 10 years of HIV infection. These analyses are novel in demonstrating that HIV-1-infected nonprogressing individuals bear the potential to transmit HIV-1 variants and that HIV variants, which led to a benign disease in a nonprogressor donor, were able to cause disease in other individuals. Overall, these studies highlight the utility of full genome sequencing in establishing epidemiologic linkage in a chronically infected HIV cohort after 10 years of initial infection.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15989463     DOI: 10.1089/aid.2005.21.575

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses        ISSN: 0889-2229            Impact factor:   2.205


  4 in total

1.  Role of viral evolutionary rate in HIV-1 disease progression in a linked cohort.

Authors:  Meriet Mikhail; Bin Wang; Philippe Lemey; Brenda Beckthold; Anne-Mieke Vandamme; M John Gill; Nitin K Saksena
Journal:  Retrovirology       Date:  2005-06-29       Impact factor: 4.602

2.  Using nearly full-genome HIV sequence data improves phylogeny reconstruction in a simulated epidemic.

Authors:  Gonzalo Yebra; Emma B Hodcroft; Manon L Ragonnet-Cronin; Deenan Pillay; Andrew J Leigh Brown
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-12-23       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Impaired nuclear import and viral incorporation of Vpr derived from a HIV long-term non-progressor.

Authors:  Leon Caly; Nitin K Saksena; Sabine C Piller; David A Jans
Journal:  Retrovirology       Date:  2008-07-18       Impact factor: 4.602

4.  Functional relevance of nonsynonymous mutations in the HIV-1 tat gene within an epidemiologically-linked transmission cohort.

Authors:  Haran Sivakumaran; Bin Wang; M John Gill; Brenda Beckholdt; Nitin K Saksena; David Harrich
Journal:  Virol J       Date:  2007-10-25       Impact factor: 4.099

  4 in total

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