| Literature DB >> 17105667 |
Saeed Khan1, Mohammad A Rai, Mohammad R Khanani, Muhammad N Khan, Syed H Ali.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Data on the subtypes of HIV in a population help in predicting the potential foci of epidemic, tracking the routes of infection and following the patterns of the virus' genetic divergence. Globally, the most prevalent HIV infection is the HIV-1 subtype C. In Asia, predominant subtypes of HIV-1 are B, C, and CRF-01AE. During the last few years, HIV prevalence in Pakistan has taken the form of a concentrated epidemic in at least two high risk groups, namely, Intravenous Drug Users (IDUs) and Male Sex Workers (MSWs). Factors that have facilitated the proliferation of HIV infection include transmission through a large number of repatriates and needle-sharing intravenous drug users, unscreened blood transfusions, and sexual illiteracy. The HIV subtypes infecting Pakistani populations have not been explored to date. In this study, we analyzed HIV-1 subtypes from in a high-risk community of IDUs in Karachi, the largest city of Pakistan.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17105667 PMCID: PMC1654165 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-6-164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
List of primers employed in the study.
| PC03 | ACACAACTGTGTTCACTAGC |
| PC04 | CAACTTCATCCACGTTCACC |
| JA9AE | CACAGTACAATGCACACATG |
| JA9B | CACAGTACAATGTACACATG |
| JA12A | GCAATAGAAAAATTCTCCTC |
| JA12B | ACAGTAGAAAAATTCCCCTC |
| JA10UB | CTGTTAAATGGCAGTCTAGC |
| JA10UC | CTGTTAAATGGTAGTCTAGC |
| JA10UG | CTGTTAAATGGCAGTTTAGC |
| JA11LAE | AATTTCTAGATCCCCTCCTG |
| JA11LB | AATTTCTGGGTCCCCTCCTG |
| JA11LC | AATTTCTAGGTCCCCTCCTG |
| JA11QA | CCCCTCCTGAGGAGTTAGCA |
| JA11VB | CACAATTAAAACTGTGCATTACAA |
| JA11XC | TTGTTTTATTAGGGAAGTGTTC |
| JA11YE | AAATTCCCCTCTACAATTAAAATGA |
| HIG777 | TCACCTAGAACTTTGAATGCATGGG |
| H1P0202 | CTAATACTGTATCATCTGCTCCTGT |
| H1Gag1584 | AAAGATGGATAATCCTGGG |
| g17 | TCCACATTTCCAACAGCCCTTTT |
PC03/PC04 primers for β-Globin, JA9AE, JA9B are the upstream primers and JA12A, JA12B are the downstream primer for the first round PCR. JA10UB, JA10UC and JA10UG are the inner upstream primers; JA11LAE, JA11LB and JA11LC are the inner downstream general primers. JA11QA, JA11VB, JA11XC and JA11YE are the inner downstream subtype specific primers for subtypes A, B, C and CRF01-AE, respectively.
Primers for gag HMA are relative to HIV-1 group M strain ELI (GenBank accession number K03454)
Figure 1Representative gel of subtype-specific PCR for HIV-1. Symbols indicate the primers used: Bg; β-globin. H; subtype-independent PCR for HIV-1; A, B, C; respectively, HIV-1 subypes A, B and C. The first and last lanes represent 50 bp molecular weight ladder. Two panels are shown, i.e., PCR amplification from known HIV positive and HIV negative subjects. In the HIV negative subject, only the β-globin gene was amplified. In the HIV positive sample, products were observed for subtype-independent (H), and HIV-1 subtype A specific PCR. A faint band is observed in lane B, but, as explained in Material and Methods, this band was disregarded due to its significantly low intensity as compared to the band in H (and A).
Figure 2Representative gag HMA gel. A2, A3, B1, B3, C1, C3, D1, D3, represent reference HIV-1 subtypes whose gag gene was partially amplified, and mixed/melted/annealed with the unknown sample (001) to form heteroduplexes. KB and 001 represent, respectively, the molecular weight ladder and the sample alone. The gel shows the fastest migrating band in lane A3, identifying the unknown subtype to be closest related to the reference A3.
History of the subjects studied.
| IDUs | 34 |
| Prolonged stay abroad | 3 |
| Contact with CSW | 2* |
| Travel History: | |
| Dubai | 1* |
| Sharja | 1* |
| Iran | 1 |
Out of the three IDUs who had a history of prolonged (more than one year) stay abroad, two (marked by asterisks) admitted to sexual contact with commercial sex workers (CSW) during their stay abroad.