| Literature DB >> 32316742 |
Wei Li1, Zhengping Zhu2, JinJin Chu1, You Ge1, Yuanyuan Xu2, Sushu Wu2, Yan He1, Qian Ni1, Yangyang Liu1, Rui Li1, Xiaoshan Li3, Pingmin Wei1.
Abstract
College students are disproportionately affected by HIV-1 in China. However, little is known about the genetic characteristics of HIV-1 among this population. A molecular epidemiological investigation was conducted among the newly diagnosed antiretroviral therapy-naïve HIV-1-infected individuals during 2015-2019 in Nanjing city, China. The pol fragment (HXB2: 2,253-3,311) was obtained by HIV-1 RNA extraction and gene amplification, and subjected to genotyping, recombination analysis, and phylogenetic inference. A total of 945 pol sequences from 226 students and 719 nonstudents were successfully amplified. Multiple genotypes were identified in students, including CRF01_AE (37.66%), CRF07_BC (32.90%), CRF55_01B (5.63%), CRF68_01B (3.46%), CRF67_01B (3.03%), subtype B (1.73%), and CRF58_01B (1.30%) and unique recombinant forms (URFs) of 01C_like (7.08%), 0107_like (3.98%), 01BC_like (2.21%), and 01B_like (1.33%). The distribution of genotypes among students was similar to that among nonstudents. The estimated mean evolutionary rate of URFs was 2.89 × 10-3 [95% Bayesian credible interval: 1.89-3.90] nucleotide substitutions/site/year. Approximately 64% (21/33) of URFs among students were located in three major clusters (0107_like, 01C_like 1, and 01C_like 2 clusters), which had recent time to the most recent common ancestors and low mean genetic distance, and presumably originated from Nanjing (posterior probability ≥0.99, state probability ≥0.9). Among 226 students with pol segments, the prevalence of primary and transmitted drug resistance mutations was 15.93% and 3.98%, respectively. The rapid evolution of multiple HIV-1 genotypes and high prevalence of URFs circulating among students in Nanjing emphasized the necessity of comprehensive surveillance for HIV-1 transmission among this population.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; college students; genotype distribution; phylogenetic analysis
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32316742 DOI: 10.1089/AID.2019.0288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses ISSN: 0889-2229 Impact factor: 2.205