Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 1999)

Dual and Recombinant Infections: An Integral Part of the HIV-1 Epidemic in Brazil

  • Artur Ramos,
  • Amilcar Tanuri,
  • Mauro Schechter,
  • Mark A. Rayfield,
  • Dale J. Hu,
  • Maulori C. Cabral,
  • Claudiu I. Bandea,
  • James Baggs,
  • Danuta Pieniazek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0501.990108
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 65 – 74

Abstract

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We systematically evaluated multiple and recombinant infections in an HIV-infected population selected for vaccine trials. Seventy-nine HIV-1 infected persons in a clinical cohort study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were evaluated for 1 year. A combination of molecular screening assays and DNA sequencing showed 3 dual infections (3.8%), 6 recombinant infections (7.6%), and 70 (88.6%) infections involving single viral subtypes. In the three dual infections, we identified HIV-1 subtypes F and B, F and D, and B and D; in contrast, the single and recombinant infections involved only HIV-1 subtypes B and F. The recombinants had five distinct B/F mosaic patterns: Bgag-p17/Bgag -p24/Fpol/Benv , Fgag-p17/Bgag -p24/Fpol/Fenv , Bgag-p17/B-Fgag -p24/Fpol/Fenv , Bgag-p17/B-Fgag -p24/Fpol/Benv , and Fgag-p17/B-Fgag -p24/Fpol/Fenv . No association was found between dual or recombinant infections and demographic or clinical variables. These findings indicate that dual and recombinant infections are emerging as an integral part of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Brazil and emphasize the heterogenous character of epidemics emerging in countries where multiple viral subtypes coexist.

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