Litcius/Paper detail

HIV-2 diversity displays two clades within group A with distinct geographical distribution and evolution

Benoît Visseaux, Mélanie Bertine, Quentin Le Hingrat, Valentine Marie Ferré, Charlotte Charpentier, Fidéline Collin, Florence Damond, Sophie Matheron, Stéphane Hué, Diane Descamps

2021Virus Evolution10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Genetic diversity of HIV-2 groups A and B has not yet been fully described, especially in a few Western Africa countries such as Ivory-Coast or Mali. We collected 444 pol, 152 vif, 129 env, and 74 LTR sequences from patients of the French ANRS CO5 HIV-2 cohort completed by 221 pol, 18 vif, 377 env, and 63 LTR unique sequences from public databases. We performed phylogenetic reconstructions and revealed two distinct lineages within HIV-2 group A, herein called A1 and A2, presenting non-negligible genetic distances and distinct geographic distributions as A1 is related to coastal Western African countries and A2 to inland Western countries. Estimated early diversification times for groups A and B in human populations were 1940 [95% higher probability densitiy: 1935–53] and 1961 [1952–70]. A1 experienced an early diversification in 1942 [1937–58] with two distinct early epidemics in Guinea-Bissau or Senegal, raising the possibility of group A emergence in those countries from an initial introduction from Ivory-Coast to Senegal, two former French colonies. Changes in effective population sizes over time revealed that A1 exponentially grew concomitantly to Guinea-Bissau independence war, but both A2 and B lineages experienced a latter growth, starting during the 80s economic crisis. This large HIV-2 genetic analysis provides the existence of two distinct subtypes within group A and new data about HIV-2 early spreading patterns and recent epidemiologic evolution for which data are scarce outside Guinea-Bissau.

Topics & Concepts

Phylogenetic treeCladeGenetic diversityDiversification (marketing strategy)DemographyPopulationGeographyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Distribution (mathematics)Evolutionary biologyBiologyGeneticsVirologyGeneSociologyMathematical analysisMarketingBusinessMathematicsHIV Research and TreatmentHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV/AIDS drug development and treatment