| Literature DB >> 27258369 |
Dennis Maletich Junqueira1,2,3, Rubia Marília de Medeiros2,3, Tiago Gräf3,4, Sabrina Esteves de Matos Almeida2,3,5.
Abstract
The human displacement and sexual behavior are the main factors driving the HIV-1 pandemic to the current profile. The intrinsic structure of the HIV transmission among different individuals has valuable importance for the understanding of the epidemic and for the public health response. The aim of this study was to characterize the HIV-1 subtype B (HIV-1B) epidemic in South America through the identification of transmission links and infer trends about geographical patterns and median time of transmission between individuals. Sequences of the protease and reverse transcriptase coding regions from 4,810 individuals were selected from GenBank. Maximum likelihood phylogenies were inferred and submitted to ClusterPicker to identify transmission links. Bayesian analyses were applied only for clusters including ≥5 dated samples in order to estimate the median maximum inter-transmission interval. This study analyzed sequences sampled from 12 South American countries, from individuals of different exposure categories, under different antiretroviral profiles, and from a wide period of time (1989-2013). Continentally, Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela were revealed important sites for the spread of HIV-1B among countries inside South America. Of note, from all the clusters identified about 70% of the HIV-1B infections are primarily occurring among individuals living in the same geographic region. In addition, these transmissions seem to occur early after the infection of an individual, taking in average 2.39 years (95% CI 1.48-3.30) to succeed. Homosexual/Bisexual individuals transmit the virus as quickly as almost half time of that estimated for the general population sampled here. Public health services can be broadly benefitted from this kind of information whether to focus on specific programs of response to the epidemic whether as guiding of prevention campaigns to specific risk groups.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27258369 PMCID: PMC4892525 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Geographic distribution and proportion of HIV-1 subtype B pol sequences from South American countries.
Map shows locations of the HIV-1 subtype B sequences included in the dataset. The proportion (green bars) and the total number of sequences analyzed from each location is indicated. A compilation of all sequences from the Brazilian set and its respective state of sampling is indicated at the table included in the figure. Black dots indicate the cities sampled in this study. Sequences from Venezuela were sampled at Caracas (n = 213), from Colombia were sampled at Medellín (n = 32) and Bogotá (n = 7), the unique sequence from Bolivia was sampled at La Paz, sequences from Argentina were sampled at Mendoza (n = 2) and Buenos Aires (n = 1238), and sequences from Uruguay were sampled at Montevideo. For the rest of the countries the sequences had no identification of sampling region. Gray-shaded areas indicate regions not included in this study.
Fig 2Number of transmission clusters and clustered sequences among 4,810 HIV-1 Subtype B codon-stripped pol sequences from South America.
(A) Number of transmission clusters identified using Cluster Picker with a SH-aLRT support threshold of ≥90 and under different within-maximum genetic distances. (B) Number of clustered sequences under different within-cluster genetic distances.
Geographical type of HIV-1 Subtype B transmissions among clusters identified within South America for the codon-stripped dataset (901bp).
| Clustered Individuals | Geographical Type of Transmission | Number of Clusters Identified | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local Transmission | 392 | 70,6 | |
| Interstate Transmission (Brazil) | 44 | 7,93 | |
| International Transmission | 31 | 5,59 | |
| Unidentified | 88 | 15,9 | |
| Local Transmission | 81 | 68,6 | |
| Interstate Transmission (Brazil) | 13 | 11 | |
| International Transmission | 6 | 5,08 | |
| Unidentified | 18 | 15,3 | |
| Local Transmission | 28 | 73,7 | |
| Interstate Transmission (Brazil) | 4 | 10,5 | |
| International Transmission | 2 | 5,26 | |
| Unidentified | 4 | 10,5 | |
| Local Transmission | 9 | 81,8 | |
| Interstate Transmission (Brazil) | 1 | 9,09 | |
| International Transmission | 1 | 9,09 | |
| Local Transmission | 1 | 100 | |
| Local Transmission | 1 | 50 | |
| Interstate Transmission (Brazil) | 1 | 50 | |
| Local Transmission | 4 | 100 | |
| 729 | - | ||
* Transmission Clusters involving sequences sampled in the same state for Brazilian sequences or in the same country for non-Brazilian sequences
Average time of HIV-1 subtype B transmission among South American individuals for the codon-stripped dataset (901bp).
| Cluster | Taxa | Geographical Type | Exposure Category | Median Internode Intervals (years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Local | - | 6.410 | |
| 7 | Interstate | HET/MSM | 4,468 | |
| 5 | Local | MSM | 0.411 | |
| 5 | Local | MSM | 0.302 | |
| 4 | Local | HET | 2.247 | |
| 6 | Local | MSM | 0.394 | |
| 5 | Local | MSM | 1.623 | |
| 5 | International | - | 1.117 | |
| 5 | Local | - | 1.540 | |
| 5 | Local | MSM | 0.757 | |
| 13 | Local | MSM | 1.596 | |
| 6 | Local | - | 3.361 | |
| 5 | Local | MSM | 0.517 | |
| 7 | Local | HET/MSM | 2.970 | |
Abbreviations: HET: Heterosexual individual, MSM: men who have sex with men individual
Drug resistance mutations identified among 4,810 sequences clustered or not clustered in transmission clusters within South America.
| Drug Resistance Mutation (DRM) | Number of Sequences presenting DRM (n = 4810) | Clustered Sequences (n = 1633) | Not Clustered Sequences (n = 3177) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | % | N | % | ||
| PI | 64 | 25 | 1.53 | 39 | 1,23 |
| NRTI | 346 | 105 | 6.43 | 241 | 7,59 |
| NNRTI | 180 | 61 | 3.74 | 119 | 3,75 |
| PI + NRTI | 751 | 171 | 10.5 | 580 | 18,3 |
| PI + NNRTI | 31 | 10 | 0.61 | 21 | 0,66 |
| NRTI + NNRTI | 788 | 178 | 10.9 | 610 | 19,2 |
| PI + NRTI + NNRTI | 847 | 170 | 10.4 | 677 | 21,3 |
Abbreviations: NRTI: nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, NNRTI: non- nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, PI: protease inhibitor