Abstract

To which extent STDs facilitated HIV-1 adaptation to humans, sparking the pandemic, is still unknown. We searched colonial medical records from 1906–1958 for Leopoldville, Belgian Congo, which was the initial epicenter of pandemic HIV-1, compiling counts of treated STD cases in both Africans and Europeans. Almost all Europeans were being treated, while for Africans, generalized treatment started only in 1929. Treated STD counts in Europeans thus reflect STD infection rates more accurately compared to counts in Africans. In Africans, the highest recorded STD treatment incidence was in 1929–1935, declining to low levels in the 1950s. In Europeans, the recorded treatment incidences were highest during the period 1910–1920, far exceeding those in Africans. Europeans were overwhelmingly male and had frequent sexual contact with African females. Consequently, high STD incidence among Europeans must have coincided with high prevalence and incidence in the city’s African population. The data strongly suggest the worst STD period was 1910–1920 for both Africans and Europeans, which coincides with the estimated origin of pandemic HIV-1. Given the strong effect of STD coinfections on HIV transmission, these new data support our hypothesis of a causal effect of STDs on the epidemic emergence of HIV-1.

Highlights

  • The Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) has a pandemic strainthat descends from Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) infecting common chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes troglodytes; SIVcpz)

  • There are other epidemic HIV strains [1,2,3,4,5], in this article, we focus on HIV-1 group M only

  • Phylogeographic analyses with hundreds of HIV-1 group M sequences collected from many different Central

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Summary

Introduction

The Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) has a pandemic strain (group M). That descends from Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) infecting common chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes troglodytes; SIVcpz). Phylogenetic analyses of SIVcpz/HIV-1 suggest that the initial chimpanzee-to-human transmission occurred in southeast Cameroon, likely through bushmeat handling activities [1,4,6,7,8]. The time of the most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) of HIV-1 group M has been dated to the early 20th century. The latest analyses, which incorporate the findings of several fossil viruses recovered from stored samples, suggest a timing closer to the start of the 20th century, dating the tMRCA at 1908 (1884–1924) [11], 1920 (1909–1930) [12], 1906 (1892–1921) [13], 1920 (1915–1925) [14]. Phylogeographic analyses with hundreds of HIV-1 group M sequences collected from many different Central

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