Frontiers in Microbiology (Nov 2021)

Identification of CRF66_BF, a New HIV-1 Circulating Recombinant Form of South American Origin

  • Joan Bacqué,
  • Elena Delgado,
  • Sonia Benito,
  • María Moreno-Lorenzo,
  • Vanessa Montero,
  • Horacio Gil,
  • Mónica Sánchez,
  • María Carmen Nieto-Toboso,
  • Josefa Muñoz,
  • Miren Z. Zubero-Sulibarria,
  • Estíbaliz Ugalde,
  • Elena García-Bodas,
  • Javier E. Cañada,
  • Jorge del Romero,
  • Carmen Rodríguez,
  • Iciar Rodríguez-Avial,
  • Luis Elorduy-Otazua,
  • José J. Portu,
  • Juan García-Costa,
  • Antonio Ocampo,
  • Jorge J. Cabrera,
  • Michael M. Thomson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.774386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) are important components of the HIV-1 pandemic. Among 110 reported in the literature, 17 are BF1 intersubtype recombinant, most of which are of South American origin. Among these, all 5 identified in the Southern Cone and neighboring countries, except Brazil, derive from a common recombinant ancestor related to CRF12_BF, which circulates widely in Argentina, as deduced from coincident breakpoints and clustering in phylogenetic trees. In a HIV-1 molecular epidemiological study in Spain, we identified a phylogenetic cluster of 20 samples from 3 separate regions which were of F1 subsubtype, related to the Brazilian strain, in protease-reverse transcriptase (Pr-RT) and of subtype B in integrase. Remarkably, 14 individuals from this cluster (designated BF9) were Paraguayans and only 4 were native Spaniards. HIV-1 transmission was predominantly heterosexual, except for a subcluster of 6 individuals, 5 of which were men who have sex with men. Ten additional database sequences, from Argentina (n = 4), Spain (n = 3), Paraguay (n = 1), Brazil (n = 1), and Italy (n = 1), branched within the BF9 cluster. To determine whether it represents a new CRF, near full-length genome (NFLG) sequences were obtained for 6 viruses from 3 Spanish regions. Bootscan analyses showed a coincident BF1 recombinant structure, with 5 breakpoints, located in p17gag, integrase, gp120, gp41-rev overlap, and nef, which was identical to that of two BF1 recombinant viruses from Paraguay previously sequenced in NFLGs. Interestingly, none of the breakpoints coincided with those of CRF12_BF. In a maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree, all 8 NFLG sequences grouped in a strongly supported clade segregating from previously identified CRFs and from the CRF12_BF “family” clade. These results allow us to identify a new HIV-1 CRF, designated CRF66_BF. Through a Bayesian coalescent analysis, the most recent common ancestor of CRF66_BF was estimated around 1984 in South America, either in Paraguay or Argentina. Among Pr-RT sequences obtained by us from HIV-1-infected Paraguayans living in Spain, 14 (20.9%) of 67 were of CRF66_BF, suggesting that CRF66_BF may be one of the major HIV-1 genetic forms circulating in Paraguay. CRF66_BF is the first reported non-Brazilian South American HIV-1 CRF_BF unrelated to CRF12_BF.

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