Abstract
The present study investigated the prevalence of HIV-1 multiple infections in a population composed by 47 patients under HAART failure and enrolled at the National DST/AIDS, Program, Ministry of Health, Brazil.Detection of multiple infections was done using a previously published RFLP assay for the HIV-1 protease gene, which is able of distinguishing between infections caused by a single or multiple HIV-1 subtypes. Samples with multiple infections were cloned, and sequence data submitted to phylogenetic analysis. We were able to identify 17 HIV-1 multiple infections out of 47 samples. Multiple infections were mostly composed by a mixture of recombinant viruses (94%), with only one case in which protease gene pure subtypes B and F were recovered. This is the first study that reports the prevalence of multiple infections and intersubtype recombinants in a population undergoing HAART in Brazil. Based on the data there was a steep increase of multiple infections after the introduction of the combined antiretroviral therapy in Brazil. Cases of multiple infections may be associated with HIV-1 genetic diversity through recombination allowing for the generation of viruses showing a combination of resistance mutations.
Publication types
-
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
-
Anti-HIV Agents / pharmacology
-
Brazil
-
Drug Resistance, Viral
-
Genotype
-
HIV Infections / epidemiology
-
HIV Infections / virology*
-
HIV Protease / genetics*
-
HIV-1 / classification
-
HIV-1 / genetics*
-
Humans
-
Molecular Sequence Data
-
Phylogeny
-
Reassortant Viruses / classification
-
Reassortant Viruses / genetics
-
Recombination, Genetic*
Substances
-
Anti-HIV Agents
-
HIV Protease
Associated data
-
GENBANK/KF767573
-
GENBANK/KF767574
-
GENBANK/KF767575
-
GENBANK/KF767576
-
GENBANK/KF767577
-
GENBANK/KF767578
-
GENBANK/KF767579
-
GENBANK/KF767580
-
GENBANK/KF767581
-
GENBANK/KF767582
-
GENBANK/KF767583
-
GENBANK/KF767584
-
GENBANK/KF767585
-
GENBANK/KF767586
-
GENBANK/KF767587
-
GENBANK/KF767588
-
GENBANK/KF767589
-
GENBANK/KF767590
-
GENBANK/KF767591
-
GENBANK/KF767592
-
GENBANK/KF767593
-
GENBANK/KF767594
-
GENBANK/KF767595
-
GENBANK/KF767596
-
GENBANK/KF767597
-
GENBANK/KF767598
-
GENBANK/KF767599
-
GENBANK/KF767600
-
GENBANK/KF767601
-
GENBANK/KF767602
-
GENBANK/KF767603
-
GENBANK/KF767604
-
GENBANK/KF767605
-
GENBANK/KF767606
-
GENBANK/KF767607
-
GENBANK/KF767608
-
GENBANK/KF767609
-
GENBANK/KF767610
-
GENBANK/KF767611
-
GENBANK/KF767612
-
GENBANK/KF767613
-
GENBANK/KF767614
-
GENBANK/KF767615
-
GENBANK/KF767616
-
GENBANK/KF767617
-
GENBANK/KF767618
-
GENBANK/KF767619
-
GENBANK/KF767620
-
GENBANK/KF767621
-
GENBANK/KF767622
-
GENBANK/KF767623
-
GENBANK/KF767624
-
GENBANK/KF767625
-
GENBANK/KF767626
-
GENBANK/KF767627
-
GENBANK/KF767628
-
GENBANK/KF767629
-
GENBANK/KF767630
-
GENBANK/KF767631
-
GENBANK/KF767632
-
GENBANK/KF767633
-
GENBANK/KF767634
-
GENBANK/KF767635
-
GENBANK/KF767636
-
GENBANK/KF767637
-
GENBANK/KF767638
-
GENBANK/KF767639
-
GENBANK/KF767640
-
GENBANK/KF767641
-
GENBANK/KF767642
-
GENBANK/KF767643
-
GENBANK/KF767644
-
GENBANK/KF767645
-
GENBANK/KF767646
-
GENBANK/KF767647
-
GENBANK/KF767648
-
GENBANK/KF767649
-
GENBANK/KF767650
-
GENBANK/KF767651
-
GENBANK/KF767652
-
GENBANK/KF767653
-
GENBANK/KF767654
-
GENBANK/KF767655
-
GENBANK/KF767656
-
GENBANK/KF767657
-
GENBANK/KF767658
-
GENBANK/KF767659
-
GENBANK/KF767660
-
GENBANK/KF767661
-
GENBANK/KF767662
-
GENBANK/KF767663
-
GENBANK/KF767664
-
GENBANK/KF767665
-
GENBANK/KF767666
-
GENBANK/KF767667
-
GENBANK/KF767668
-
GENBANK/KF767669
-
GENBANK/KF767670
-
GENBANK/KF767671
-
GENBANK/KF767672
Grants and funding
This work was supported by the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP, Foundation for the Support of Research in the State of São Paulo; grant numbers 2009/10915-0 and 2009/11216-9). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.