| Literature DB >> 16849040 |
Ricardo Parreira1, João Piedade, Ana Domingues, Daniela Lobão, Marisa Santos, Teresa Venenno, João Luís Baptista, Selma A S Mussa, Avertino T L Barreto, Alberto João Baptista, Aida Esteves.
Abstract
In this report, we examined the genetic diversity of HIV-1 strains circulating in the city of Beira, the second largest metropolitan area in Mozambique. A total of 131 blood samples, collected between August and October 2003 from antiretroviral-naïve individuals, were characterized with a combined approach consisting of heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA) subtyping for gag (n=74) and/or env (n=117) genes, and DNA sequence analysis of proviral env (C2V3C3, n=52), LTR (n=30) and/or pol (n=43) genomic regions. Aside from the identification, by bootscanning analysis, of a viral strain with a C/A1 mosaic C2V3C3 structure, classified as subtype A by env HMA, phylogenetic inference studies of the sequence data demonstrated the circulation of genetically diverse subtype C viruses, predominantly of the R5 type. Inspection of the LTR sequences revealed a pattern of structural and regulatory elements typical of subtype C, with 63.3% of the viruses showing three NF-kappaB binding sites. Analysis of the predicted protease sequences enabled us to detect a single primary mutation (I84V, n=1) associated with resistance to protease inhibitors (PI), while secondary mutations were highly prevalent, some of them in combinations which may confer PI resistance. Although an unexpectedly high rate (11.6%) of reverse transcriptase key mutations (V75A, K103N, Y181C, M184I, or P236L) was detected in the sequences analyzed, our data suggest the non-epidemic circulation of resistant viruses, and the absence of multi-class drug resistant viral strains.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16849040 DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2006.05.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbes Infect ISSN: 1286-4579 Impact factor: 2.700