HIV-1 Genetic Diversity in Recently Diagnosed Infections in Moscow: Predominance of A FSU , Frequent Branching in Clusters, and Circulation of the Iberian Subtype G Variant

HIV-1 protease-reverse transcriptase sequences from 62 HIV-1-infected individuals recently diagnosed in Moscow were analyzed. Subtype A former Soviet Union (FSU) (A ) variant was the predominant clade (62.9%), followed by subtype B (22.6%), unique recombinants (6.5%), subtype G (6.5%), and CRF01_AE...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS research and human retroviruses 2018-07, Vol.34 (7), p.629-634
Hauptverfasser: Karamov, Eduard, Epremyan, Khoren, Siniavin, Andrei, Zhernov, Yury, Cuevas, María Teresa, Delgado, Elena, Sánchez-Martínez, Mónica, Carrera, Cristina, Kornilaeva, Galina, Turgiev, Ali, Bacqué, Joan, Pérez-Álvarez, Lucía, Thomson, Michael M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:HIV-1 protease-reverse transcriptase sequences from 62 HIV-1-infected individuals recently diagnosed in Moscow were analyzed. Subtype A former Soviet Union (FSU) (A ) variant was the predominant clade (62.9%), followed by subtype B (22.6%), unique recombinants (6.5%), subtype G (6.5%), and CRF01_AE (1.6%). A predominated among people who inject drugs (88.9%) and heterosexually acquired infections (77.8%), while subtype B was the most prevalent genetic form among men who have sex with men (44%), although A was also frequent in this population (36%). Forty-eight (77.4%) viruses branched within intrasubtype clusters, three of which, of subtype B, had a majority of viruses collected outside of FSU. The four subtype G viruses identified in this study belonged to the Portuguese-Spanish (Iberian) variant and, together with three from databases, formed a Russian cluster closely related to viruses from Denmark. This is the first report of the circulation of the Iberian subtype G variant in Russia.
ISSN:0889-2229
1931-8405
DOI:10.1089/aid.2018.0055