Abstract

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) subtype G is the second most prevalent HIV-1 clade in West Africa, accounting for nearly 30% of infections in the region. There is no information about the spatiotemporal dynamics of dissemination of this HIV-1 clade in Africa. To this end, we analyzed a total of 305 HIV-1 subtype G pol sequences isolated from 11 different countries from West and Central Africa over a period of 20 years (1992 to 2011). Evolutionary, phylogeographic and demographic parameters were jointly estimated from sequence data using a Bayesian coalescent-based method. Our analyses indicate that subtype G most probably emerged in Central Africa in 1968 (1956–1976). From Central Africa, the virus was disseminated to West and West Central Africa at multiple times from the middle 1970s onwards. Two subtype G strains probably introduced into Nigeria and Togo between the middle and the late 1970s were disseminated locally and to neighboring countries, leading to the origin of two major western African clades (GWA-I and GWA-II). Subtype G clades circulating in western and central African regions displayed an initial phase of exponential growth followed by a decline in growth rate since the early/middle 1990s; but the mean epidemic growth rate of GWA-I (0.75 year−1) and GWA-II (0.95 year−1) clades was about two times higher than that estimated for central African lineages (0.47 year−1). Notably, the overall evolutionary and demographic history of GWA-I and GWA-II clades was very similar to that estimated for the CRF06_cpx clade circulating in the same region. These results support the notion that the spatiotemporal dissemination dynamics of major HIV-1 clades circulating in western Africa have probably been shaped by the same ecological factors.

Highlights

  • The current distribution of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) group M subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) around the world resulted from the chance exportation of different viral strains out of Central Africa into new geographic regions were these initiated secondary epidemics [1]

  • The GWA-I clade was the predominant subtype G lineage detected in Nigeria (80%) and the GWA-II clade predominates in Togo/Ghana (86%)

  • This study indicates that the HIV-1 subtype G likely originated in Central Africa around the late 1960s

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Summary

Introduction

The current distribution of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) group M subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) around the world resulted from the chance exportation of different viral strains out of Central Africa into new geographic regions were these initiated secondary epidemics [1]. West Africa is one of the most strongly connected regions in the continent [2] and appears as an area of intense intraregional migration [3]. This coincides with an overall dominance of the CRF02_AG variant, that accounts for about 50% of all HIV-1 infections in West Africa [4]. The occurrence of the CRF06_cpx clade ranges from 40–50% of HIV-1 infections in Burkina Faso [18,19,20], to 5– 15% in Benin, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Togo [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,21,22,23,24,28,29], and ,3% in other western African countries [14,26,27,30]

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