Abstract

New human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) have recently emerged and disseminated rapidly in China; in total 38 CRFs have been identified thus far. Yunnan province shares its border with Myanmar, and is regarded as a "hotspot" for the occurrence of new HIV-1 recombinations; more than half of novel CRFs reported in China have been first documented in Yunnan province. In the present study, based on the information available on four existing near-full-length genome (NFLG) sequences, combined with data on four other closely related sequences obtained via Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) analysis, NFLG/subregion phylogenetic, bootscanning, and time to the most recent common ancestor (TMRCA) analyses were performed. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the eight strains demonstrated the formation of a distinct monophyletic branch with a bootstrap value of 100%. Strains in this branch were distantly related to all known HIV-1 CRFs; it was temporarily named CRF111_01C. Bootscanning analysis revealed that CRF111_01C consisted of a CRF01_AE backbone and four inserted subtype C segments. Remarkably, CRF111_01C shared six mosaic fragment identities with the previously identified CRF100_01C. Furthermore, CRF111_01C may be deemed a potential second-generation CRF consisting of CRF100_01C and C. Coalescent Bayesian analyses revealed that the TMRCA of CRF111_01C was approximately the period 1999-2002. The emergence of such second-generation recombinants highlights that continuous molecular screening is necessary to carefully monitor the evolutionary dynamics of HIV-1 epidemics.

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