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HIV type 1 group M clades infecting subjects from rural villages in equatorial rain forests of Cameroon

  • Ping Zhong
  • , Sherri Burda
  • , Mateusz Urbanski
  • , Henriette Kenfack
  • , Marcel Tongo
  • , Leo Heyndrickx
  • , Aubin Nanfack
  • , Judith Shang
  • , Lucy Agyingi
  • , Susan Zolla-Pazner
  • , Leopold Zekeng
  • , Phillipe Nyambi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

Though the HIV-1 subtypes infecting patients living in urban and semi-urban areas in Cameroon have been reported, information on the subtypes infecting patients in rural villages is lacking. To begin to understand the diversity of the HIV-1 group M subtypes infecting persons living in rural villages in the equatorial rain forest regions of Cameroon, 49 plasma samples from 14 rural villages in four provinces of Cameroon were analyzed using heteroduplex mobility analysis (HMA), DNA sequencing, and phylogenetic tree analysis on the basis of env C2V5, gag, or pol regions. Sixty-one percent of the group M infections were clade A or CRF02_AG-like as subtyped by env and gag. Of the remaining group M infections, 12% were either A or CRF02_AG-like or CRF01_AE-like in recombination with other clades; 25% were infections that were entirely non-A or non-CRF02_AG-like; and 2% were CRF11_cpx. The HIV-1 group M clades identified included A, D, F (F2), G, and H. The CRF strains identified were CRF02_AG-like, CRF01_AE-like, and CRF11_cpx. Two new intersubtype recombinant infections, H/G and A/F2, were identified. This study suggests that the HIV-1 diversity in rural villages in the equatorial rain forest of Cameroon is at least as broad as has been observed in major cities of Cameroon and that multiple HIV-1 group M subtypes are infecting persons living in the countryside of Cameroon.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)495-505
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Volume31
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Dec 2002
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cameroon
  • HIV
  • Heteroduplex mobility analysis (HMA)
  • Rural villages
  • Sequences
  • Subtypes

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