...
首页> 外文期刊>BMC Infectious Diseases >Bridging epidemiology with population genetics in a low incidence MSM-driven HIV-1 subtype B epidemic in Central Europe
【24h】

Bridging epidemiology with population genetics in a low incidence MSM-driven HIV-1 subtype B epidemic in Central Europe

机译:在中欧由MSM引起的HIV-1 B型亚型低流行中,流行病学与人群遗传学的融合

获取原文

摘要

The HIV-1 epidemic in Slovenia, a small Central European country, has some characteristics that make it an ideal model to study HIV-1 transmission. The epidemic is predominantly affecting men who have sex with men infected with subtype B (89% of all patients), has a low prevalence (less than 1/1000) and is growing slowly. The aim of the present study was to analyze in detail the evolutionary history and the determinants of transmission. A total of 223 partial pol gene sequences from therapy na?ve individuals were included, representing 52% of all patients newly diagnosed in 13?years (2000–2012) and analyzed together with genetically similar worldwide sequences, selected in a BLAST search. Combined analysis (maximum likelihood and Bayesian) of HIV-1 transmission chains revealed 8 major clusters (n?≥?10 patients), 1 group of 4 patients, 2 trios and 12 transmission pairs, thus leaving only 43 (19.3%) Slovenian patients infected with subtype B without a local epidemiological link, indicating a predominance of local transmission of HIV-1 infection. Bayesian analysis performed on a full set of sequences estimated several introductions of HIV-1 into Slovenia, with the most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) of the earliest Slovenian cluster dated to the late 1980s, although tMRCAs obtained from separate independent analysis of each cluster showed considerably more recent estimates. These findings indicate inconsistencies in molecular clock estimation, which we further explored. We hypothesize that these inconsistent dating estimates across the tree could be caused by an evolutionary rate acceleration of HIV-1 after entering the Slovenia epidemic that is not taken into account by the molecular clock model. It could be caused by a lower transmission rate in this setting, as demonstrated by the low epidemic growth rate estimated by Bayesian skyline plot analysis. HIV-1 subtype B was introduced into Slovenia at several time points from the late 80s onward. The majority of patients had a local transmission link, indicating a closed HIV community. The observed slower epidemic rate suggests that individuals with a long-lasting infection are the driving force of the epidemic in this region.
机译:中欧小国斯洛文尼亚的HIV-1流行病具有某些特征,使其成为研究HIV-1传播的理想模型。该流行病主要影响与B型感染者发生性行为的男性(占所有患者的89%),患病率低(小于1/1000)并且生长缓慢。本研究的目的是详细分析进化史和传播的决定因素。包括来自初治个体的223个部分pol基因序列,占在13年(2000-2012年)中新诊断出并在BLAST搜索中选择的与遗传相似的全球序列一起分析的所有患者中的52%。对HIV-1传播链的组合分析(最大似然和贝叶斯分析)显示有8个主要群(n≥10个患者),一组4个患者,2个三重奏和12个传播对,因此仅留下43个(19.3%)斯洛文尼亚患者没有亚型流行病学联系的B型亚型感染者,表明主要是HIV-1感染的局部传播。对全套序列进行的贝叶斯分析估计斯洛文尼亚多次引入HIV-1,最早的斯洛文尼亚聚类的最新共同祖先(tMRCA)可以追溯到1980年代后期,尽管从每个聚类的单独独立分析中获得的tMRCAs显示最近的估计。这些发现表明分子时钟估计的不一致,我们将进一步探讨。我们假设这些不一致的约会估计可能是由于进入斯洛文尼亚流行病后,HIV-1的进化速率加快所引起的,而分子时钟模型并未考虑这一点。贝叶斯天际线图分析估计的低流行率增长率表明,在这种情况下,这可能是由较低的传播率引起的。从80年代后期开始,HIV-1 B型亚型在几个时间点被引入斯洛文尼亚。大多数患者具有本地传播联系,表明艾滋病毒社区处于封闭状态。观察到的较慢的流行率表明,感染持续时间长的个体是该区域流行的驱动力。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号