Evidence for a post-Columbian introduction of human T-cell lymphotropic virus in Latin America
S Van Dooren, E Gotuzzo, M Salemi, D Watts, E Audenaert, S Duwe, H Ellerbrok, R Grassmann, E Hagelberg, J Desmyter and AM Vandamme Rega Institute for Medical Research, KU Leuven, Belgium. To investigate the origin and dissemination of human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I in Latin America, we perfo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of general virology 1998-11, Vol.79 (11), p.2695-2708 |
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Zusammenfassung: | S Van Dooren, E Gotuzzo, M Salemi, D Watts, E Audenaert, S Duwe, H Ellerbrok, R Grassmann, E Hagelberg, J Desmyter and AM Vandamme
Rega Institute for Medical Research, KU Leuven, Belgium.
To investigate the origin and dissemination of human T-cell lymphotropic
virus type I in Latin America, we performed phylogenetic analysis on the
LTR and env sequences of 13 HTLV-I isolates from Peruvians of four
different ethnic groups: blacks and some mulattos of African origin;
Quechuas of Inca origin; Nikkei of Japanese descendance; and Mestizos, a
mixed population of white and Indian origin. All Peruvian samples could be
situated within the cosmopolitan subtype HTLV-Ia, yet one sample showed an
indeterminate Western blot pattern, lacking reactivity towards the HTLV-I
type specific MTA1 peptide. Within the LTR, we could confirm the previously
reported subdivision into four subgroups--one big transcontinental clade A,
a Japanese clade B, a West African/Caribbean clade C and a North African
clade D--and we identified a new separate subgroup E of black Peruvian
strains. The clustering of the Peruvian samples seemed to depend on the
ethnic origin of the host. The largest heterogeneity was observed in the
black Peruvian samples. The mitochondrial DNA type of one of these black
Peruvian strains of subgroup E was identical to that of West African source
populations of the slave trade. Both findings support the idea of multiple
post-Columbian introductions of African HTLV-Ia strains into the black
Latin American population. Additionally, a tight cluster of Nikkei and
Japanese samples implied a separate and rather recent transmission of a
Japanese lineage of HTLV-I into Peru. A well- supported cluster of Latin
American strains (including Peruvian Quechuas and Colombian Amerindians)
could be situated within the transcontinental group. Molecular clock
analysis of the Latin American and Japanese clade resulted in an equal
evolutionary rate for those strains. Along with the anthropologically
documented peopling of the Americas, the analysis was more in favour of a
recent (400 to 100 years ago) introduction of HTLV-Ia into the American
continent rather than a Palaeolithic introduction. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1317 1465-2099 |
DOI: | 10.1099/0022-1317-79-11-2695 |