Abstract

The Human T-cell Lymphotropic Virus (HTLV-1) is a Deltaretrovírus that was first isolated in the 1970s, and associated with Adult T-cell Leucemia-Lymphoma (ATLL), and subsequently to Tropical Spastic Paraparesis-Myelopathy (TSP/HAM). The genetic diversity of the virus varies among geographic regions, although its mutation rate is very low (approximately 1% per thousand years) in comparison with other viruses. The present study determined the genetic diversity of HTLV-1 in the metropolitan region of Belém, in northern Brazil. Blood samples were obtained from patients at the UFPA Tropical Medicine Nucleus between January 2010 and December 2013. The DNA was extracted and the PX region of the HTLV was amplified using nested PCR. The positive samples were then digested using the Taq1 enzyme for the identification and differentiation of the HTLV-1 and HTLV-2. The 5’LTR region of the positive HTLV-1 samples were amplified by nested PCR, and then sequenced genetically. The phylogenetic analysis of the samples was based on the maximum likelihood method and the evolutionary profile was analyzed by the Bayesian approach. Overall, 78 samples tested positive for HTLV-1, and 44 were analyzed here. The aA (cosmopolitan-transcontinental) subtype was recorded in all the samples. The following evolutionary rates were recorded for the different subtypes–a: 2.10−3, b: 2.69. 10−2, c: 6.23. 10−2, d: 3.08. 10−2, e: 6. 10−2, f: 1.78. 10−3, g: 2.2. 10−2 mutations per site per year. The positive HTLV-1 samples tested in the present study were characterized by their low genetic diversity and high degree of stability.

Highlights

  • Overall 78 of the samples obtained from the University of Para (UFPA) Tropical Medicine Nucleus between January 2010 and December 2013 tested positive for HTLV-1

  • The genetic diversity of the 44 sequences obtained in the present study (GenBank access numbers MF384328—MF384371) was compared with that of 200 HTLV-1 samples representing the seven different HTLV-1 subtypes

  • The present study confirmed that the aA HTLV-1 genotype is found in the metropolitan region of Belem, which is consistent with the evidence from other regions of Brazil and Latin America

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Summary

Introduction

The Human T-cell Lymphotropic Virus (HTLV-1) is a Deltaretrovirus that was first isolated from a blood sample taken in the 1970s from an African-American patient with a cutaneous. Few data are available from the Amazon region, reinforcing the need for more detailed and representative studies of the infected population to support research into possible vaccines and antiviral treatments for HTLV-1. As this virus is associated with highly deleterious diseases and is endemic to the Amazon region, one major priority is to investigate its epidemiology and genetic variability in the metropolitan region of the city of Belem, the capital of Parastate, and the largest urban center in northern Brazil [11,12, 13, 14]

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