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Genome Analysis Suggests HTLV-1aA Introduction in Chile Related to Migrations of Ancestral Indigenous Populations

Overview
Journal Virus Res
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2022 Feb 2
PMID 35108577
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Abstract

The human T cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1), unlike other RNA viruses such as HIV, has a stable genome and has infected humans since remote times. Although the HTLV-1 infection is endemic in South America, there is scarce information about HTLV-1 in Chile and its history of introduction. This study assessed the genomic content of HTLV-1 from Chile and its relationship with HTLV-1 lineages circulating worldwide by phylogenetic reconstruction and dating analyses. A total of 30 HTLV-1 genomes collected from the four continents were used to conduct dating analyses, including the first HTLV-1 genome from Amerindian/Mapuche ethnicity. Estimation was performed using a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo coalescent-based approach as implemented in the BEAST program. The time of the most recent ancestor of HTLV-1 from Chile was ∼1409 years ago, which coincides with the period of Amerindian population expansion across South America. Our results suggest HTLV-1aA was possibly introduced in Chile during the migrations of the ancestral indigenous populations.

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HTLV infection in Brazil's second-largest indigenous reserve.

Amianti C, Bandeira L, Cesar G, Weis-Torres S, Ortiz Tanaka T, Machado I Sci Rep. 2022; 12(1):16701.

PMID: 36202887 PMC: 9537150. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-21086-7.