Seroepidemiologic, Molecular, and Phylogenetic Analyses of Simian T-Cell Leukemia Viruses (STLV-I) from Various Naturally infected Monkey Species from Central and Western Africa

A study of simian T-cell lymphoma/leukemia virus infection, conducted on 747 nonhuman primates belonging to 14 different species in Central and Western Africa, indicated that 4 species (Cercopithecus aethiops, Erythrocebus patas, Papio doguera, and Cercopithecus mona pogonias) had a high prevalence...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 1994-01, Vol.198 (1), p.297-310
Hauptverfasser: Saksena, Nitin K., Herve, Vincent, Durand, Jean Paul, Leguenno, Bernard, Diop, Ousmane M., Digoutte, Jean Pierre, Mathiot, Christian, Muller, Michaela C., Love, Jayne L., Dube, Syamalima, Sherman, Michael P., Benz, Patricia M., Erensoy, Selda, Galat-Luong, Ann, Galat, Gerard, Paul, Baishali, Dube, Dipak K., Sinoussi, Francoise Barre, Poiesz, Bernard J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A study of simian T-cell lymphoma/leukemia virus infection, conducted on 747 nonhuman primates belonging to 14 different species in Central and Western Africa, indicated that 4 species (Cercopithecus aethiops, Erythrocebus patas, Papio doguera, and Cercopithecus mona pogonias) had a high prevalence of seropositivity to simian T-cell lymphoma/leukemia virus type I (STLV-I). The other nonhuman primate species, however, had negative or low levels of ant-HTLV-I antibodies. STLV-I pol and env DNA was detected in 12 of 12 different animals among the seropositive species. However, STLV-I pX DNA could be detected in only 10 of 12 animals. Comparative phylogenetic analyses based on 140 bp sequence of the pol gene indicate that these STLV-I isolates were 0-9% divergent from each other and were 3.5-7% divergent from the prototype related human retrovirus HTLV-I (ATK). The West African STLV-I isolates formed a unique phylogenetic cluster as did most of the Central African STLV-I isolates, save for STLV-I (Tan 90). The phylogenetic data indicate that cross species transmission of HTLV-I and STLV-I continued to occur long after their ancestral strain separated from the progenitor to HTLV-II. Comparative amino acid analyses indicated that there was marked conservation of the TAX protein regardless of host species, while the pol and REX proteins exhibited increasing levels of diversity.
ISSN:0042-6822
1096-0341
DOI:10.1006/viro.1994.1033