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   Molecular epidemiology of endemic human t-lymphotropic virus type 1 in a rural community in guinea-bissau  
   
نویسنده van tienen c. ,de silva t.i. ,alcantara l.c.j. ,onyango c.o. ,jarju s. ,gonçalves n. ,vincent t. ,aaby p. ,whittle h. ,schim van der loeff m. ,cotten m.
منبع plos neglected tropical diseases - 2012 - دوره : 6 - شماره : 6
چکیده    Background: human t-lymphotropic virus type 1 (htlv-1) infection causes lethal adult t-cell leukemia (atl) and severely debilitating htlv-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (ham/tsp) in up to 5% of infected adults. htlv-1 is endemic in parts of africa and the highest prevalence in west africa (5%) has been reported in caio,a rural area in the north-west of guinea-bissau. it is not known which htlv-1 variants are present in this community. sequence data can provide insights in the molecular epidemiology and help to understand the origin and spread of htlv-1. objective: to gain insight into the molecular diversity of htlv-1 in west africa. methods: htlv-1 infected individuals were identified in community surveys between 1990-2007. the complete long terminal repeat (ltr) and p24 coding region of htlv-1 was sequenced from infected subjects. socio-demographic data were obtained from community census and from interviews performed by fieldworkers. phylogenetic analyses were performed to characterize the relationship between the caio htlv-1 and htlv-1 from other parts of the world. results: ltr and p24 sequences were obtained from 72 individuals (36 ltr,24 p24 only and 12 both). consistent with the low evolutionary change of htlv-1,many of the sequences from unrelated individuals showed 100% nucleotide identity. most (45 of 46) of the ltr sequences clustered with the cosmopolitan htlv-1 subtype 1a,subgroup d (1ad). ltr and p24 sequences from two subjects were divergent and formed a significant cluster with htlv-1 subtype 1g,and with the most divergent african simian t-cell lymphotropic virus,tan90. conclusions: the cosmopolitan htlv-1 1ad predominates in this rural west african community. however,htlv-1 subtype 1g is also present. this subtype has not been described before in west africa and may be more widespread than previously thought. these data are in line with the hypothesis that multiple monkey-to-man zoonotic events are contributing to htlv-1 diversity. © 2012 van tienen et al.
آدرس virology,medical research council,fajara,gambia,medical microbiology and infectious diseases,erasmus medical centre,rotterdam, Netherlands, virology,medical research council,fajara,gambia,ucl centre for medical molecular virology,division of infection and immunity,university college london,london, United Kingdom, public health advanced laboratory,gonçalo moniz research center,oswaldo cruz foundation,salvador,bahia,brazil,bahia school of medicine and public health foundation for science development,salvador,bahia, Brazil, virology,medical research council,fajara,gambia,kemri-wellcome trust programme,kilifi, Kenya, virology,medical research council,fajara, Gambia, virology,medical research council,fajara,gambia,projecto de saúde de bandim,bissau, Guinea-Bissau, virology,medical research council,fajara, Gambia, projecto de saúde de bandim,indepth network,bissau, Guinea-Bissau, virology,medical research council,fajara, Gambia, health service of amsterdam (ggd) and academic medical centre,amsterdam, Netherlands, virology,medical research council,fajara,gambia,wellcome trust sanger institute,wellcome trust genome campus,hinxton,cambridge, United Kingdom
 
     
   
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