Phyloepidemiological analysis reveals that viral divergence led to the paucity of SIVmus/gsn/mon infections in wild populations
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Human immunodeficiency virus subtype-1 (HIV-1) is the result of cross-species transmission of simian immunodeficiency virus from chimpanzees (SIVcpz). SIVcpz is a chimeric virus which shares common ancestors with viruses infecting red capped mangabeys and a subset of guenon species. The epidemiology of SIV infection in hominoids is characterized by low prevalence and uneven geographical distribution. Surveys in Cameroon indicated that two closely related members of the guenon species subset, mustached guenons and greater spot-nosed guenons, infected with SIVmus and SIVgsn respectively, have also low rates of SIV infections in their populations. Compared to other monkeys, including red capped mangabeys and closely related guenon species, such an epidemiology is unusual.By intensifying sampling of geographically distinct populations of moustached and greater spot-nosed guenons in Gabon, and including large sample sets of mona guenons in Cameroon, we add strong support that the paucity of SIV infections in wild populations is a general feature of this monophyletic group of viruses. Furthermore, comparative phylogenetic analysis reveals that this phenotype is a feature of this group of viruses infecting phylogenetically dispirate hosts, suggesting that this epidemiological phenotype results from infection with these HIV-1 related viruses rather than a common host factor. Thus, these HIV-1 related viruses, SIVcpz and the guenon viruses which share a common ancestor with part of the SIVcpz genome, have a distinct epidemiology to that found in other African primate species.
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1098-5514