| Literature DB >> 9143307 |
A Giri1, J P Slattery, W Heneine, A Gessain, E Rivadeneira, R C Desrosiers, L Rosen, R Anthony, J Pamungkas, D Iskandriati, A L Richards, V Herve, H McClure, S J O'Brien, G Franchini.
Abstract
Evolutionary associations of human and simian T-cell leukemia/lymphotropic viruses I and II (HTLV-I/II and STLV-I/II) are inferred from phylogenetic analysis of tax gene sequences. Samples studied consisted of a geographically diverse assemblage of viral strains obtained from 10 human subjects and 20 individuals representing 12 species of nonhuman primates. Sequence analyses identified distinct substitutions, which distinguished between viral types I and II, irrespective of host species. Phylogenetic reconstruction of nucleotide sequences strongly supported two major evolutionary groups corresponding to viral types I and II. With the type I lineage, clusters were composed of strains from multiple host species. A genetically diverse, monophyletic lineage consisting of eight new viral strains from several species of Asian macaques was identified. The second lineage consisted of a monophyletic assemblage of HTLV-II/STLV-II strains from Africa and the New World, including an isolate from a pygmy chimp (Pan paniscus) as an early divergence within the lineage. High levels of genetic variation among strains from Asian STLV-I macaque suggest the virus arose in Asia. Evidence of the origin of the type II virus is less clear, but diversity among HTLV-II variants from a single isolated population of Mbati villagers is suggestive but not proof of an African origin.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9143307 DOI: 10.1006/viro.1997.8511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virology ISSN: 0042-6822 Impact factor: 3.616