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Previously transmitted HIV-1 strains are preferentially selected during subsequent sexual transmissions. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted in Rakai, Uganda, to analyze the diversity of HIV-1 during sexual transmission, focusing on how genetic bottlenecks affect viral diversity over time.
  • Researchers examined HIV-1 sequences from individuals in HIV-discordant relationships and found that the viral diversity within infected individuals (intrahost) was significantly higher than the diversity between different individuals (interhost).
  • The results indicated that most newly infected individuals carried viral strains that were more similar to their donor partner's earlier strains, suggesting that sexual transmission tends to favor the transmission of older, ancestral viral strains over newer ones.

Article Abstract

Background: A genetic bottleneck is known to exist for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) at the point of sexual transmission. However, the nature of this bottleneck and its effect on viral diversity over time is unclear.

Methods: Interhost and intrahost HIV diversity was analyzed in a stable population in Rakai, Uganda, from 1994 to 2002. HIV-1 envelope sequences from both individuals in initially HIV-discordant relationships in which transmission occurred later were examined using Sanger sequencing of bulk polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products (for 22 couples), clonal analysis (for 3), and next-generation deep sequencing (for 9).

Results: Intrahost viral diversity was significantly higher than changes in interhost diversity (P < .01). The majority of HIV-1-discordant couples examined via bulk PCR (16 of 22 couples), clonal analysis (3 of 3), and next-generation deep sequencing (6 of 9) demonstrated that the viral populations present in the newly infected recipient were more closely related to the donor partner's HIV-1 variants found earlier during infection as compared to those circulating near the estimated time of transmission (P = .03).

Conclusions: These findings suggest that sexual transmission constrains viral diversity at the population level, partially because of the preferential transmission of ancestral as opposed to contemporary strains circulating in the transmitting partner. Future successful vaccine strategies may need to target these transmitted ancestral strains.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3466994PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jis503DOI Listing

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