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Phylogeographic Analyses Reveal the Early Expansion and Frequent Bidirectional Cross-Border Transmissions of Non-pandemic HIV-1 Subtype B Strains in Hispaniola
Author(s) -
Gonzalo Bello,
Ighor Arantes,
Vincent Lacoste,
M. Ouka,
Jacques Boncy,
Raymond Césaire,
Bernard Liautaud,
Mathieu Nacher,
Georges Dos Santos
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
frontiers in microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.701
H-Index - 135
ISSN - 1664-302X
DOI - 10.3389/fmicb.2019.01340
Subject(s) - pandemic , phylogeography , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , biology , virology , covid-19 , evolutionary biology , geography , genetics , phylogenetics , gene , medicine , infectious disease (medical specialty) , disease , pathology
The human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) subtype B has probably been circulating on the island of Hispaniola since the 1960s, but information about the early viral history on this Caribbean island is scarce. In this study, we reconstruct the dissemination dynamics of early divergent non-pandemic subtype B lineages (designated B CAR ) on Hispaniola by analyzing a country-balanced dataset of HIV-1 B CAR pol sequences from Haiti ( n = 103) and the Dominican Republic ( n = 123). Phylogenetic analyses supported that B CAR strains from Haiti and the Dominican Republic were highly intermixed between each other, although the null hypothesis of completely random mixing was rejected. Bayesian phylogeographic analyses placed the ancestral B CAR virus in Haiti and the Dominican Republic with the same posterior probability support. These analyses estimate frequent viral transmissions between Haiti and the Dominican Republic since the early 1970s onwards, and the presence of local B CAR transmission networks in both countries before first AIDS cases was officially recognized. Demographic reconstructions point that the B CAR epidemic in Hispaniola grew exponentially until the 1990s. These findings support that the HIV-1 epidemics in Haiti and the Dominican Republic have been connected by a recurrent bidirectional viral flux since the initial phase, which poses a great challenge in tracing the geographic origin of the B CAR epidemic within Hispaniola using only genetic data. These data also reinforce the notion that prevention programs have successfully reduced the rate of new HIV-1 transmissions in Hispaniola since the end of the 1990s.

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