Increasing HIV drug resistance is an important public health concern. The current study aimed to assess HIV drug resistance among people who live with HIV (PLWH) experiencing virological failure. Blood samples and epidemiological characteristics were collected in four Siberian regions from PLWH experiencing ART failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Antiretroviral (ARV) drugs have played a vital role in controlling the HIV-1 epidemic; however, some challenges remain. ARV drugs vary in their ability to control HIV infection, displaying differences in treatment-limiting factors and genetic barriers to resistance. The current report assesses the prevalence of HIV-1 drug resistance mutations (DRMs) among patients who failed first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) and evaluates the genetic barrier of different regimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHIV-1 epidemic in Russia is one of the fastest growing in the world reaching 1.14 million people living with HIV-1 (PLWH) in 2021. Since mid-1990s, the HIV-1 epidemic in Russia has started to grow substantially due to the multiple HIV-1 outbreaks among persons who inject drugs (PWID) leading to expansion of the HIV-1 sub-subtype A6 (former Soviet Union (FSU) subtype A).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKyrgyzstan has one of the highest rates of HIV-1 spread in Central Asia. In this study, we used molecular-epidemiological approaches to examine the HIV-1 epidemic in Kyrgyzstan. Samples were obtained from HIV-positive individuals who visited HIV/AIDS clinics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMore than a quarter of HIV-infected individuals registered in Russia live in Siberia. Unlike Central Russia where HIV-1 subtype A6 is predominant, in most Siberian regions since 2012, a new HIV-1 CRF63_02A1 genetic variant has spread, with the share of this variant attaining 75-85% among newly identified HIV cases. Krasnoyarsk Krai is considered to be a high-risk territory according to morbidity rate and HIV infection incidence among the population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAIDS Res Hum Retroviruses
March 2020
Currently, HIV-1 CRF63_02A6 is the prevalent genetic variant of the HIV-infected subjects in the major part of the Siberian Federal District (Russia). The HIV-1 CRF63_02A6 R5-tropic pT11.17 and X4-tropic pMtBs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe high genetic variability of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) leads to a constant emergence of new genetic variants, including the recombinant virus CRF63_02A1, which is widespread in the Siberian Federal District of Russia. We studied HIV-1 CRF63_02A1 integrase (IN_CRF) catalyzing the incorporation of viral DNA into the genome of an infected cell. The consensus sequence was designed, recombinant integrase was obtained, and its DNA-binding and catalytic activities were characterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF. Specific molecular epidemic features of HIV infection in Tyumen Oblast (TO), Russia, were studied. .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKemerovo Oblast (KO) has had the highest rate of HIV spread in Russia since 2011. The aim of this work was to study the genetic variation of HIV-1 in Kemerovo Oblast. Blood was sampled from a total of 91 HIV-positive antiretroviral-therapy-naïve individuals in 2013 (38) and 2015 (53).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe prevalence of HIV infection in different Russian regions is nonuniform. In the Tomsk region (TR), 2020 HIV new infection cases were recorded in 2013, the morbidity having increased 5.9-fold as compared to 2012.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol
January 2013
Aim: Study phylogenetic interconnections of HIV-1 subtype A and B variants circulating in Novosibirsk region (NSR).
Materials And Methods: 268 HIV-1 variants isolated in 2007 - 2010 from blood samples of HIV infected patients in NSR, Samara, Congo and Moscow. HIV-1 variant genotyping was performed by analysis of 1.
Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol
September 2011
Aim: Study of circulating 02_AG recombinant form HIV-1 isolates that have been rapidly spreading in Novosibirsk region during 3 recent years.
Materials And Methods: WHO protocol for primary HIV isolation was used, automatic sequencer was used for genetic characterization of isolates. Virus specific RNA were isolated and env HIV-1 region DNA fragments were processed.
Libraries of hybrid plasmids carrying DNA fragments of complete genomes of 8 variola virus strain from the Russian Collection belonging to 2 epidemical types and isolated in various geographic regions of the world were obtained. Genomic sequences of variola virus can be thus preserved for a long time in a biologically safe form and provide the research work on studying the genetic organization of this unique virus and on developing modern methods for rapid detection of variola virus and other orthopoxviruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes for TNF-binding proteins (CrmBs) of variola virus (VARV), monkeypox virus (MPXV) or cowpox (CPXV) were isolated with PCR from viral genomes and expressed within baculovirus DNAs in Sf21 insect cell line. Properties of resulted recombinant proteins were studied with physical-chemical and immunological methods. It was shown with solid phase enzyme-linked immunoassay that viral proteins inhibited hTNF binding with polyclonal hTNF-antibodies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large open reading frame (ORF) has been identified in two German cowpox virus strains. The ORFs (5676 and 5679 nt, respectively) differ in 10 nucleotides, resulting in an amino acid homology of 99.8%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol
March 2005
The nucleotide sequence of the variant of human immunodeficiency virus of type 1 (HIV-1), mostly widespread on the territory of the Novosibirsk region, was determined. The analysis of the nucleotide sequence confirmed that this variant belonged to HIV-1 of subtype A. The HIV-1 recombinant variant of subtype envB/envA with the recombination area within the second conservative region C2 of gene env, so far unknown, was detected and characterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes and proteins of the kelch superfamily were structurally analyzed in the smallpox (SPV), monkeypox (MPV), cowpox (CPV), and vaccinia (VV) viruses. Genes potentially coding for the kelch-like proteins were found only in the variable terminal regions of the orthopoxvirus genome. The set and sizes of their protein products varied with species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonkeypox virus (MPV) belongs to the orthopoxvirus genus of the family Poxviridae, is endemic in parts of Africa, and causes a human disease that resembles smallpox. The 196,858-bp MPV genome was analyzed with regard to structural features and open reading frames. Each end of the genome contains an identical but oppositely oriented 6379-bp terminal inverted repetition, which similar to that of other orthopoxviruses, includes a putative telomere resolution sequence and short tandem repeats.
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