Origin of the HIV-1 group O epidemic in western lowland gorillas

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d'Arc, Mirela | Ayouba, Ahidjo | Esteban, Amandine | Learn, Gerald, H | Boué, Vanina | Liegeois, Florian | Etienne, Lucie | Tagg, Nikki | Leendertz, Fabian | Boesch, Christophe | Madinda, Nadège | Robbins, Martha | Gray, Maryke | Cournil, Amandine | Ooms, Marcel | Letko, Michael | Simon, Viviana | Sharp, Paul | Hahn, Beatrice | Delaporte, Eric | Mpoudi Ngole, Eitel | Peeters, Martine

Edité par CCSD ; National Academy of Sciences -

International audience. HIV-1, the cause of AIDS, is composed of four phylogenetic lineages, groups M, N, O, and P, each of which resulted from an independent cross-species transmission event of simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) infecting African apes. Although groups M and N have been traced to geographically distinct chimpanzee communities in southern Cameroon, the reservoirs of groups O and P remain unknown. Here, we screened fecal samples from western lowland (n = 2,611), eastern lowland (n = 103), and mountain (n = 218) gorillas for gorilla SIV (SIVgor) antibodies and nucleic acids. Despite testing wild troops throughout southern Cameroon (n = 14), northern Gabon (n = 16), the Democratic Republic of Congo (n = 2), and Uganda (n = 1), SIVgor was identified at only four sites in southern Cameroon, with prevalences ranging from 0.8-22%. Amplification of partial and full-length SIVgor sequences revealed extensive genetic diversity, but all SIVgor strains were derived from a single lineage within the chimpanzee SIV (SIVcpz) radiation. Two fully sequenced gorilla viruses from southwestern Cameroon were very closely related to, and likely represent the source population of, HIV-1 group P. Most of the genome of a third SIVgor strain, from central Cameroon, was very closely related to HIV-1 group O, again pointing to gorillas as the immediate source. Functional analyses identified the cytidine deaminase APOBEC3G as a barrier for chimpanzee-to-gorilla, but not gorilla-to-human, virus transmission. These data indicate that HIV-1 group O, which spreads epidemically in west central Africa and is estimated to have infected around 100,000 people, originated by cross-species transmission from western lowland gorillas.

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