HIV Type 1 Diversity and the Reliability of the Heteroduplex Mobility Assay
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses
- Vol. 14 (10), 877-883
- https://doi.org/10.1089/aid.1998.14.877
Abstract
We investigated HIV-1 diversity by means of heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA) genotyping. We studied 199 samples from patients originating from 26 countries and living in France. The HMA successfully genotyped 182 (91%) of these samples, as follows: 77 (42%) subtype A, 57 (31%) subtype B, 5 (3%) subtype C, 5 (3%) subtype D, 8 (4%) subtype E, 22 (12%) subtype F, 5 (3%) subtype G, and 3 (2%) subtype H. We were not able to genotype 12 samples by means of the HMA. These latter strains were sequenced, and phylogenetic analyses revealed that they were highly divergent subtype A-, D-, or G-related strains. Eight (of 12) subtype D strains were indeterminate by HMA, owing to the broad intrasubtype diversity, suggesting that new reference subtype D plasmids are required, as previously proposed. Thirty-seven strains belonging to the different subtypes were sequenced, and the results showed perfect concordance with the HMA results. Interlaboratory quality controls confirmed the reliability of the HMA for HIV-1 subtyping, despite the extensive viral variability. However, plasmid selection must be continuously revised to cover viral diversification.Keywords
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