High genetic diversity of HIV-1 was found in men who have sex with men in Shijiazhuang, China.

Journal: Infection, Genetics And Evolution : Journal Of Molecular Epidemiology And Evolutionary Genetics In Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Men who have sex with men (MSM) have become one of the populations with severely HIV prevalence in China. However, very few genetic studies have been done on HIV-1 spreading in this population. In this study, the genetic characterization of HIV-1 strains prevalent in the MSM in Shijiazhuang, China, was analyzed basing on the HIV-1 full-length gag, pol, and partial env gene. 21 drug-naïve HIV-1 sero-positive patients were enrolled into the study. Full length gag, pol, partial env genes and some near full length genomes were amplified with nest RT-PCR followed by sequencing. Multiple subtypes, including CRF01_AE (52.9%), subtype B (35.3%) and CRF07_BC (11.8%), were found in the population. Phylogenetic analysis showed close relationship between our strains with those from Beijing MSM but not those from paid blood donors of local area. Drug resistance surveillance evaluation showed no transmitted drug resistance (TDR). However, some drug-resistance related polymorphism sites (V181I and V106I) were popularly found in B subtype strains. The findings will contribute to understanding the distribution and evolution of HIV-1 in MSM and also help the behavior change intervention.

Authors
Lin Li, Xinli Lu, Hanping Li, Lili Chen, Zheng Wang, Yongjian Liu, Zuoyi Bao, Tianyi Li, Chong Tian, Hongxin Liu, Daomin Zhuang, Siyang Liu, Jingyun Li
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS