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Subtypes of HIV

The subtypes of HIV include two main subtypes, known as HIV type 1 (HIV-1) and HIV type 2 (HIV-2). These subtypes have distinct genetic differences and are associated with different epidemiological patterns and clinical characteristics.

Human immunodeficiency viruses
Phylogenetic tree of the SIV and HIV viruses
Scientific classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Riboviria
Kingdom: Pararnavirae
Phylum: Artverviricota
Class: Revtraviricetes
Order: Ortervirales
Family: Retroviridae
Subfamily: Orthoretrovirinae
Genus: Lentivirus
Groups included
Cladistically included but traditionally excluded taxa

HIV-1 exhibits a genetic relation to viruses indigenous to chimpanzees and gorillas that inhabit West Africa, while HIV-2 viruses are affiliated with viruses present in the sooty mangabey, a vulnerable West African primate.[2]

HIV-1 viruses can be further stratified into groups M, N, O, and P. Among these, HIV-1 group M viruses are the most prevalent, infecting nearly 90% of people living with HIV and are responsible for the global AIDS pandemic. Group M can be further subdivided into subtypes based on genetic sequence data. Certain subtypes are known for their increased virulence or drug resistance to different medications used to treat HIV.

HIV-2 viruses are generally considered to be less virulent and less transmissible than HIV-1 M group viruses, although HIV-2 is also known to still cause AIDS.

One of the prevailing challenges in the pursuit of effective management of HIV is the virus's pronounced genetic variability and rapid viral evolution.[3]

Major types edit

HIV-1 edit

HIV-1 is the most common and most pathogenic strain of the virus. As of 2022, approximately 1.3 million such infections occur annually.[4][5] Scientists divide HIV-1 into a major group (group M) and two or more minor groups, namely groups N, O and possibly a group P. Each group is believed to represent an independent transmission of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) into humans, excluding subtypes within a specific group.[2] The complete genome sequence of HIV-1 contains a total of 39 open reading frames (ORFs) across all six possible reading frames (RFs), but only a few of them are functional.[6]

Group M edit

With 'M' for "major", this is by far the most common type of HIV, with more than 90% of HIV/AIDS cases caused from infection with HIV-1 group M viruses. This major HIV virus, which was the source of pre-1960 pandemic viruses, originated in the 1920s in Léopoldville, the Belgian Congo, today known as Kinshasa, which is now the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).[7] Its zoonotic origin is the SIVcpz strain, which infects chimpanzees. The M group is subdivided further into clades, called subtypes, that are also given a letter. There are also "circulating recombinant forms" or CRFs derived from genetic recombination between viruses of different subtypes which are in addition each given a number. CRF12_BF, for example, is a recombination between subtypes B and F.[citation needed]

  • Subtype A is common in West and Central Africa.[8][failed verification]
  • Subtype B is the dominant form in Europe, the Americas, Japan, and Australia.[9] In addition, subtype B is the most common form in the Middle East and North Africa.[10] It may have been exported from Africa when Haitian professionals visited Kinshasa in the 1960s and brought it to Haiti in 1964.[7]
  • Subtype C is the dominant form in Southern Africa, Eastern Africa, India, Nepal, and parts of China.[9]
  • Subtype D is generally only seen in Eastern and central Africa.[9]
  • Subtype E was originally used to describe a strain that is now accounted for as the combined strain CRF01_AE.[11] This means the original, singular, E strain has disappeared, but we know it existed, as it is visible in this combined strain form.[citation needed]
  • Subtype F has been found in central Africa, South America and Eastern Europe.[12]
  • Subtype G (and the CRF02_AG) have been found in Africa and central Europe.[12]
  • Subtype H is limited to central Africa.[12]
  • Subtype I was originally used to describe a strain that is now accounted for as CRF04_cpx, with the cpx for a "complex" recombination of several subtypes.[11]
  • Subtype J is primarily found in North, Central and West Africa, and the Caribbean[13]
  • Subtype K is limited to the DRC and Cameroon.[12]
  • Subtype L is limited to the DRC.[14]

The spatial movement of these subtypes moved along the railways and waterways of the DRC from Kinshasa to these other areas.[15] These subtypes are sometimes further split into sub-subtypes such as A1 and A2 or F1 and F2.[citation needed] In 2015, the HIV strain CRF19, a recombinant of subtype A, subtype D, and subtype G, with a subtype D protease, was found to be strongly associated with rapid progression to AIDS in Cuba.[16] This is not thought to be a complete or final list, and further types are likely to be found.[17]

 
HIV-1 subtype prevalence in 2002
 
Geographic distribution of HIV-1 subtypes, Circulating Recombinant Forms (CRFs), and Unique Recombinant Forms (URFs) in Africa, 2015–2020[18]

Group N edit

The 'N' stands for "non-M, non-O".[19] This group was discovered by a Franco-Cameroonian team in 1998, when they identified and isolated the HIV-1 variant strain, YBF380, from a Cameroonian woman who died of AIDS in 1995. When tested, the YBF380 variant reacted with an viral envelope antigen from SIVcpz rather than with those of Group M or Group O, indicating it was indeed a novel strain of HIV-1.[20] As of 2015, fewer than 20 Group N infections have been recorded.[21]

Group O edit

The O ("Outlier") group has infected about 100,000 individuals located in West-Central Africa and is not usually seen outside of that area.[21] It is reportedly most common in Cameroon, where a 1997 survey found that about 2% of HIV-positive samples were from Group O.[22] Its zoonotic origin is SIVgor, which infects gorillas (rather than the more common source, SIVcpz).[23] The group caused some concern because it could not be detected by early versions of the HIV-1 test kits. More advanced HIV tests have now been developed to detect both Group O and Group N.[24]

Group P edit

In 2009, a newly analyzed HIV sequence was reported to have greater similarity to SIVgor, than SIVcpz. The virus had been isolated from a Cameroonian woman residing in France who was diagnosed with HIV-1 infection in 2004. The scientists reporting this sequence placed it in a proposed Group P "pending the identification of further human cases".[25][26][27]

HIV-2 edit

HIV-2 is mostly found in Africa, and therefore less recognized elsewhere in the world. The first identification of HIV-2 occurred in 1985 in Senegal by microbiologist Souleymane Mboup and his collaborators.[28] The first case in the United States was in 1987.[29] The first confirmed case of HIV-2 was a Portuguese man who was treated at the London Hospital for Tropical Diseases and later died in 1987. He was believed to have been exposed to the disease in Guinea-Bissau where he lived between 1956 and 1966. His pathological diagnosis at the time was cryptosporidiosis and enterovirus infection, but an analysis of his stored serum in 1987 found that he was infected with HIV-2.[30]

Many test kits for HIV-1 will also detect HIV-2.[31]

There are eight known HIV-2 groups, designated A to H. Of these, only groups A and B are pandemic. Group A is found mainly in West Africa, but has also spread to Angola, Mozambique, Brazil, India, Europe, and the US. Despite the presence of HIV-2 globally, Group B is mainly confined to West Africa.[32][33]

HIV-2 is closely related to SIV endemic in sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys atys) (SIVsmm), a monkey species inhabiting the forests of Littoral West Africa. Phylogenetic analyses show that the virus most closely related to the two strains of HIV-2 which spread considerably in humans (HIV-2 groups A and B) is the SIVsmm found in the sooty mangabeys of the Tai forest, in western Ivory Coast.[32]

There are six additional known HIV-2 groups, each having been found in just one person. They all seem to derive from independent transmissions from sooty mangabeys to humans. Groups C and D have been found in two people from Liberia, groups E and F have been discovered in two people from Sierra Leone, and groups G and H have been detected in two people from the Ivory Coast. Each of these HIV-2 strains, for which humans are probably dead-end hosts, is most closely related to SIVsmm strains from sooty mangabeys living in the same country where the human infection was found.[32][33]

Diagnosis edit

HIV-2 diagnosis can be made when a patient has no symptoms but positive blood work indicating the individual has HIV. The Multispot HIV-1/HIV-2 Rapid Test is currently the only FDA approved method for such differentiation between the two viruses. Recommendations for the screening and diagnosis of HIV has always been to use enzyme immunoassays that detect HIV-1, HIV-1 group O, and HIV-2.[34] When screening the combination, if the test is positive followed by an indeterminate HIV-1 western blot, a follow-up test, such as amino acid testing, must be performed to distinguish which infection is present.[35] According to the NIH, a differential diagnosis of HIV-2 should be considered when a person is of West African descent or has had sexual contact or shared needles with such a person. West Africa is at the highest risk as it is the origin of the virus.[citation needed]

Treatments edit

HIV-2 has been found to be less pathogenic than HIV-1.[36] The mechanism of HIV-2 is not clearly defined, nor the difference from HIV-1, however the transmission rate is much lower in HIV-2 than HIV-1. Both viruses can lead to AIDS in infected individuals and both can mutate to develop drug resistance.[34] Disease monitoring in patients with HIV-2 includes clinical evaluation and CD4 cell counts, while treatment includes anti-retroviral therapy (ART), nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), protease inhibitors (PI), and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) with the addition of CCR5 co-receptor antagonists and fusion inhibitors.[37]

Choice of initial and/or second-line therapy for HIV-2 has not yet been defined. HIV-2 appears to be resistant to NNRTIs intrinsically, but may be sensitive to NRTIs, though the mechanism is poorly understood. Protease inhibitors have shown variable effect, while integrase inhibitors are also being evaluated. Combination regimens of the above listed therapies are being looked into as well, also showing variable effect depending on the types of therapies combined. While the mechanisms are not clearly understood for HIV-1 and HIV-2, it is known that they use different pathways and patterns, making the algorithms used to evaluate HIV-1 resistance-associated mutations irrelevant to HIV-2.[34]

Each virus can be contracted individually, or they can be contracted together in what is referred to as co-infection. HIV-2 seems to have lower mortality rates, less severe symptoms and slower progression to AIDS than HIV-1 alone or the co-infection. In co-infection, however, this is largely dependent on which virus was contracted first. HIV-1 tends to out compete HIV-2 for disease progression. Co-infection seems to be a growing problem globally as time progresses, with most cases being identified in West African countries, as well as some cases in the USA.[37] A study found that individuals who contract HIV-2 before HIV-1 tend to have a slower rate of disease progression, suggesting that the immune response to HIV-2 may limit the proliferation of HIV-1.[38]

Pregnancy edit

If a pregnant mother is exposed, screening is performed as normal. If HIV-2 is present, a number of perinatal ART drugs may be given as a prophylactic to lower the risk of mother-to-child transmission. After the child is born, a standard six-week regimen of these prophylactics should be initiated. Breast milk may also contain viral particles of HIV-2; therefore, breastfeeding is strictly advised against.[35]

Evolution edit

The rapid evolution of HIV can be attributed to its high mutation rate. During the early stages of mutation, evolution appears to be neutral due to the absence of an evolutionary response. However, when examining the virus in several different individuals, convergent mutations can be found appearing in these viral populations independently.[39]

HIV evolution within a host influences factors including the virus' set-point viral load. If the virus has a low set-point viral load, the host will live longer, and there is a greater probability that the virus will be transmitted to another individual. If the virus has a high set-point viral load, the host will live for a shorter amount of time and there is a lower probability that the virus will be transmitted to another individual.[40] HIV has evolved to maximize the number of infections to other hosts, and this tendency for selection to favor intermediate strains shows that HIV undergoes stabilizing selection.[citation needed]

The virus has also evolved to become more infectious between hosts. There are three different mechanisms that allow HIV to evolve at a population level.[40] One includes the continuous battle to evolve and overcome the immune system which slows down the evolution of HIV and shifts the virus’ focus towards a population level. Another includes the slow evolution of viral load due to viral load mutations being neutral within the host. The last mechanism focuses on the virus' preference to transmit founding viral strains stored during the early stages of infection. This preference of the virus to transmit its stored genome copies explains why HIV evolves more quickly within the host than between hosts.[40]

HIV is evolving toward a milder form, but it is still "an awfully long way" from no longer being deadly,[41][42] with severe variants still appearing.[43][44]

Drug resistance mutations edit

Isolates of HIV-1 and HIV-2 with resistance to antiretroviral drugs arise through natural selection and genetic mutations, which have been tracked and analyzed. The Stanford HIV Drug Resistance Database and the International AIDS Society publish lists of the most important of these; first year listing 80 common mutations, and the latest year 93 common mutations, and made available through the Stanford HIV RT and Protease Sequence Database.[citation needed]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • HIV/AIDS at Curlie
  • HIV Types at Avert.org
  • 3D macromolecular structures of HIV-1 at the EM Data Bank(EMDB) 2020-08-08 at the Wayback Machine
  • Geographic distribution of subtyped sequences in the GenBank HIV Database

subtypes, subtypes, include, main, subtypes, known, type, type, these, subtypes, have, distinct, genetic, differences, associated, with, different, epidemiological, patterns, clinical, characteristics, human, immunodeficiency, viruses, phylogenetic, tree, viru. The subtypes of HIV include two main subtypes known as HIV type 1 HIV 1 and HIV type 2 HIV 2 These subtypes have distinct genetic differences and are associated with different epidemiological patterns and clinical characteristics Human immunodeficiency viruses Phylogenetic tree of the SIV and HIV viruses Scientific classification unranked Virus Realm Riboviria Kingdom Pararnavirae Phylum Artverviricota Class Revtraviricetes Order Ortervirales Family Retroviridae Subfamily Orthoretrovirinae Genus Lentivirus Groups included Human immunodeficiency virus 1 Human immunodeficiency virus 2 Cladistically included but traditionally excluded taxa Simian immunodeficiency virus subgroups i ii 1 HIV 1 exhibits a genetic relation to viruses indigenous to chimpanzees and gorillas that inhabit West Africa while HIV 2 viruses are affiliated with viruses present in the sooty mangabey a vulnerable West African primate 2 HIV 1 viruses can be further stratified into groups M N O and P Among these HIV 1 group M viruses are the most prevalent infecting nearly 90 of people living with HIV and are responsible for the global AIDS pandemic Group M can be further subdivided into subtypes based on genetic sequence data Certain subtypes are known for their increased virulence or drug resistance to different medications used to treat HIV HIV 2 viruses are generally considered to be less virulent and less transmissible than HIV 1 M group viruses although HIV 2 is also known to still cause AIDS One of the prevailing challenges in the pursuit of effective management of HIV is the virus s pronounced genetic variability and rapid viral evolution 3 Contents 1 Major types 1 1 HIV 1 1 1 1 Group M 1 1 2 Group N 1 1 3 Group O 1 1 4 Group P 1 2 HIV 2 1 2 1 Diagnosis 1 2 2 Treatments 1 2 3 Pregnancy 2 Evolution 2 1 Drug resistance mutations 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksMajor types editHIV 1 edit HIV 1 is the most common and most pathogenic strain of the virus As of 2022 update approximately 1 3 million such infections occur annually 4 5 Scientists divide HIV 1 into a major group group M and two or more minor groups namely groups N O and possibly a group P Each group is believed to represent an independent transmission of simian immunodeficiency virus SIV into humans excluding subtypes within a specific group 2 The complete genome sequence of HIV 1 contains a total of 39 open reading frames ORFs across all six possible reading frames RFs but only a few of them are functional 6 Group M edit With M for major this is by far the most common type of HIV with more than 90 of HIV AIDS cases caused from infection with HIV 1 group M viruses This major HIV virus which was the source of pre 1960 pandemic viruses originated in the 1920s in Leopoldville the Belgian Congo today known as Kinshasa which is now the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo DRC 7 Its zoonotic origin is the SIVcpz strain which infects chimpanzees The M group is subdivided further into clades called subtypes that are also given a letter There are also circulating recombinant forms or CRFs derived from genetic recombination between viruses of different subtypes which are in addition each given a number CRF12 BF for example is a recombination between subtypes B and F citation needed Subtype A is common in West and Central Africa 8 failed verification Subtype B is the dominant form in Europe the Americas Japan and Australia 9 In addition subtype B is the most common form in the Middle East and North Africa 10 It may have been exported from Africa when Haitian professionals visited Kinshasa in the 1960s and brought it to Haiti in 1964 7 Subtype C is the dominant form in Southern Africa Eastern Africa India Nepal and parts of China 9 Subtype D is generally only seen in Eastern and central Africa 9 Subtype E was originally used to describe a strain that is now accounted for as the combined strain CRF01 AE 11 This means the original singular E strain has disappeared but we know it existed as it is visible in this combined strain form citation needed Subtype F has been found in central Africa South America and Eastern Europe 12 Subtype G and the CRF02 AG have been found in Africa and central Europe 12 Subtype H is limited to central Africa 12 Subtype I was originally used to describe a strain that is now accounted for as CRF04 cpx with the cpx for a complex recombination of several subtypes 11 Subtype J is primarily found in North Central and West Africa and the Caribbean 13 Subtype K is limited to the DRC and Cameroon 12 Subtype L is limited to the DRC 14 The spatial movement of these subtypes moved along the railways and waterways of the DRC from Kinshasa to these other areas 15 These subtypes are sometimes further split into sub subtypes such as A1 and A2 or F1 and F2 citation needed In 2015 the HIV strain CRF19 a recombinant of subtype A subtype D and subtype G with a subtype D protease was found to be strongly associated with rapid progression to AIDS in Cuba 16 This is not thought to be a complete or final list and further types are likely to be found 17 nbsp HIV 1 subtype prevalence in 2002 nbsp Geographic distribution of HIV 1 subtypes Circulating Recombinant Forms CRFs and Unique Recombinant Forms URFs in Africa 2015 2020 18 Group N edit The N stands for non M non O 19 This group was discovered by a Franco Cameroonian team in 1998 when they identified and isolated the HIV 1 variant strain YBF380 from a Cameroonian woman who died of AIDS in 1995 When tested the YBF380 variant reacted with an viral envelope antigen from SIVcpz rather than with those of Group M or Group O indicating it was indeed a novel strain of HIV 1 20 As of 2015 update fewer than 20 Group N infections have been recorded 21 Group O edit The O Outlier group has infected about 100 000 individuals located in West Central Africa and is not usually seen outside of that area 21 It is reportedly most common in Cameroon where a 1997 survey found that about 2 of HIV positive samples were from Group O 22 Its zoonotic origin is SIVgor which infects gorillas rather than the more common source SIVcpz 23 The group caused some concern because it could not be detected by early versions of the HIV 1 test kits More advanced HIV tests have now been developed to detect both Group O and Group N 24 Group P edit In 2009 a newly analyzed HIV sequence was reported to have greater similarity to SIVgor than SIVcpz The virus had been isolated from a Cameroonian woman residing in France who was diagnosed with HIV 1 infection in 2004 The scientists reporting this sequence placed it in a proposed Group P pending the identification of further human cases 25 26 27 HIV 2 edit HIV 2 is mostly found in Africa and therefore less recognized elsewhere in the world The first identification of HIV 2 occurred in 1985 in Senegal by microbiologist Souleymane Mboup and his collaborators 28 The first case in the United States was in 1987 29 The first confirmed case of HIV 2 was a Portuguese man who was treated at the London Hospital for Tropical Diseases and later died in 1987 He was believed to have been exposed to the disease in Guinea Bissau where he lived between 1956 and 1966 His pathological diagnosis at the time was cryptosporidiosis and enterovirus infection but an analysis of his stored serum in 1987 found that he was infected with HIV 2 30 Many test kits for HIV 1 will also detect HIV 2 31 There are eight known HIV 2 groups designated A to H Of these only groups A and B are pandemic Group A is found mainly in West Africa but has also spread to Angola Mozambique Brazil India Europe and the US Despite the presence of HIV 2 globally Group B is mainly confined to West Africa 32 33 HIV 2 is closely related to SIV endemic in sooty mangabeys Cercocebus atys atys SIVsmm a monkey species inhabiting the forests of Littoral West Africa Phylogenetic analyses show that the virus most closely related to the two strains of HIV 2 which spread considerably in humans HIV 2 groups A and B is the SIVsmm found in the sooty mangabeys of the Tai forest in western Ivory Coast 32 There are six additional known HIV 2 groups each having been found in just one person They all seem to derive from independent transmissions from sooty mangabeys to humans Groups C and D have been found in two people from Liberia groups E and F have been discovered in two people from Sierra Leone and groups G and H have been detected in two people from the Ivory Coast Each of these HIV 2 strains for which humans are probably dead end hosts is most closely related to SIVsmm strains from sooty mangabeys living in the same country where the human infection was found 32 33 Diagnosis edit Main article Diagnosis of HIV AIDS HIV 2 diagnosis can be made when a patient has no symptoms but positive blood work indicating the individual has HIV The Multispot HIV 1 HIV 2 Rapid Test is currently the only FDA approved method for such differentiation between the two viruses Recommendations for the screening and diagnosis of HIV has always been to use enzyme immunoassays that detect HIV 1 HIV 1 group O and HIV 2 34 When screening the combination if the test is positive followed by an indeterminate HIV 1 western blot a follow up test such as amino acid testing must be performed to distinguish which infection is present 35 According to the NIH a differential diagnosis of HIV 2 should be considered when a person is of West African descent or has had sexual contact or shared needles with such a person West Africa is at the highest risk as it is the origin of the virus citation needed Treatments edit Main article Management of HIV AIDS HIV 2 has been found to be less pathogenic than HIV 1 36 The mechanism of HIV 2 is not clearly defined nor the difference from HIV 1 however the transmission rate is much lower in HIV 2 than HIV 1 Both viruses can lead to AIDS in infected individuals and both can mutate to develop drug resistance 34 Disease monitoring in patients with HIV 2 includes clinical evaluation and CD4 cell counts while treatment includes anti retroviral therapy ART nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors NRTIs protease inhibitors PI and non nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors NNRTIs with the addition of CCR5 co receptor antagonists and fusion inhibitors 37 Choice of initial and or second line therapy for HIV 2 has not yet been defined HIV 2 appears to be resistant to NNRTIs intrinsically but may be sensitive to NRTIs though the mechanism is poorly understood Protease inhibitors have shown variable effect while integrase inhibitors are also being evaluated Combination regimens of the above listed therapies are being looked into as well also showing variable effect depending on the types of therapies combined While the mechanisms are not clearly understood for HIV 1 and HIV 2 it is known that they use different pathways and patterns making the algorithms used to evaluate HIV 1 resistance associated mutations irrelevant to HIV 2 34 Each virus can be contracted individually or they can be contracted together in what is referred to as co infection HIV 2 seems to have lower mortality rates less severe symptoms and slower progression to AIDS than HIV 1 alone or the co infection In co infection however this is largely dependent on which virus was contracted first HIV 1 tends to out compete HIV 2 for disease progression Co infection seems to be a growing problem globally as time progresses with most cases being identified in West African countries as well as some cases in the USA 37 A study found that individuals who contract HIV 2 before HIV 1 tend to have a slower rate of disease progression suggesting that the immune response to HIV 2 may limit the proliferation of HIV 1 38 Pregnancy edit Main article HIV and pregnancy If a pregnant mother is exposed screening is performed as normal If HIV 2 is present a number of perinatal ART drugs may be given as a prophylactic to lower the risk of mother to child transmission After the child is born a standard six week regimen of these prophylactics should be initiated Breast milk may also contain viral particles of HIV 2 therefore breastfeeding is strictly advised against 35 Evolution editThe rapid evolution of HIV can be attributed to its high mutation rate During the early stages of mutation evolution appears to be neutral due to the absence of an evolutionary response However when examining the virus in several different individuals convergent mutations can be found appearing in these viral populations independently 39 HIV evolution within a host influences factors including the virus set point viral load If the virus has a low set point viral load the host will live longer and there is a greater probability that the virus will be transmitted to another individual If the virus has a high set point viral load the host will live for a shorter amount of time and there is a lower probability that the virus will be transmitted to another individual 40 HIV has evolved to maximize the number of infections to other hosts and this tendency for selection to favor intermediate strains shows that HIV undergoes stabilizing selection citation needed The virus has also evolved to become more infectious between hosts There are three different mechanisms that allow HIV to evolve at a population level 40 One includes the continuous battle to evolve and overcome the immune system which slows down the evolution of HIV and shifts the virus focus towards a population level Another includes the slow evolution of viral load due to viral load mutations being neutral within the host The last mechanism focuses on the virus preference to transmit founding viral strains stored during the early stages of infection This preference of the virus to transmit its stored genome copies explains why HIV evolves more quickly within the host than between hosts 40 HIV is evolving toward a milder form but it is still an awfully long way from no longer being deadly 41 42 with severe variants still appearing 43 44 Drug resistance mutations edit Isolates of HIV 1 and HIV 2 with resistance to antiretroviral drugs arise through natural selection and genetic mutations which have been tracked and analyzed The Stanford HIV Drug Resistance Database and the International AIDS Society publish lists of the most important of these first year listing 80 common mutations and the latest year 93 common mutations and made available through the Stanford HIV RT and Protease Sequence Database citation needed See also editHIV superinfection History of HIV AIDS Epidemiology of HIV AIDS Timeline of HIV AIDS HIV AIDS research Discovery and development of CCR5 receptor antagonistsReferences edit Although ICTV lists HIV 1 and HIV 2 as distinct species from SIV they do cladistically fall into the group of SIV a b Sharp PM Hahn BH September 2011 Origins of HIV and the AIDS pandemic Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine 1 1 a006841 doi 10 1101 cshperspect a006841 PMC 3234451 PMID 22229120 Robertson DL Hahn BH Sharp PM March 1995 Recombination in AIDS viruses Journal of Molecular Evolution 40 3 249 259 Bibcode 1995JMolE 40 249R doi 10 1007 BF00163230 PMID 7723052 S2CID 19728830 Gary EN Weiner DB August 2020 DNA vaccines prime time is now Current Opinion in Immunology Vaccines Special Section on Evolutionary and systems immunology 65 21 27 doi 10 1016 j coi 2020 01 006 PMC 7195337 PMID 32259744 UNAIDS Global HIV statistics fact sheet 2023 PDF UNAIDS 2023 epidemiological estimates UNAIDS 2023 Retrieved 2023 09 19 Dhar DV Amit P Kumar MS November 2012 In Silico Identification of New Genes in HIV 1 by ORF Prediction Method PDF International Research Journal of Biological Sciences 1 7 52 54 a b Faria NR Rambaut A Suchard MA Baele G Bedford T Ward MJ et al October 2014 HIV epidemiology The early spread and epidemic ignition of HIV 1 in human populations Science 346 6205 56 61 Bibcode 2014Sci 346 56F doi 10 1126 science 1256739 PMC 4254776 PMID 25278604 Bobkov AF 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HIV evolving into milder form BBC News Retrieved 20 July 2017 Guglielmi G February 2022 Highly virulent HIV variant found circulating in Europe Nature doi 10 1038 d41586 022 00317 x PMID 35115695 S2CID 246530234 Wymant C Bezemer D Blanquart F Ferretti L Gall A Hall M et al February 2022 A highly virulent variant of HIV 1 circulating in the Netherlands Science 375 6580 540 545 Bibcode 2022Sci 375 540T doi 10 1126 science abk1688 hdl 1887 3502598 PMID 35113714 S2CID 246530612 External links editHIV AIDS at Curlie HIV Types at Avert org 3D macromolecular structures of HIV 1 at the EM Data Bank EMDB Archived 2020 08 08 at the Wayback Machine Geographic distribution of subtyped sequences in the GenBank HIV Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Subtypes of HIV amp oldid 1220701180 HIV 1, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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