2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152499
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Ultra-Deep Sequencing of HIV-1 near Full-Length and Partial Proviral Genomes Reveals High Genetic Diversity among Brazilian Blood Donors

Abstract: BackgroundHere, we aimed to gain a comprehensive picture of the HIV-1 diversity in the northeast and southeast part of Brazil. To this end, a high-throughput sequencing-by-synthesis protocol and instrument were used to characterize the near full length (NFLG) and partial HIV-1 proviral genome in 259 HIV-1 infected blood donors at four major blood centers in Brazil: Pro-Sangue foundation (São Paulo state (SP), n 51), Hemominas foundation (Minas Gerais state (MG), n 41), Hemope foundation (Recife state (PE), n 9… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Among the 14 CRFs_BF1 described so far, eight originated in Brazil (CRF28_BF, CRF29_BF, CRF39_BF, CRF40_BF, CRF46_BF, CRF70_BF, CRF71_BF and CRF72_BF) [1822]. The importance of BF1 recombinants in Brazil is further corroborated by the description of countless URFs in all country regions [2326]. Previous studies from our research group in different study populations in Central West, North and Northeast Brazilian States showed variable prevalence of BF1 recombinants in the pol subgenomic fragment: (Goiás: 3.7–18.1%, Mato Grosso: 11.9%, Mato Grosso do Sul: 8.2–25.9%, Tocantins: 7.7%, Maranhão: 7.5%, Piauí: 4.5% [11,2737].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Among the 14 CRFs_BF1 described so far, eight originated in Brazil (CRF28_BF, CRF29_BF, CRF39_BF, CRF40_BF, CRF46_BF, CRF70_BF, CRF71_BF and CRF72_BF) [1822]. The importance of BF1 recombinants in Brazil is further corroborated by the description of countless URFs in all country regions [2326]. Previous studies from our research group in different study populations in Central West, North and Northeast Brazilian States showed variable prevalence of BF1 recombinants in the pol subgenomic fragment: (Goiás: 3.7–18.1%, Mato Grosso: 11.9%, Mato Grosso do Sul: 8.2–25.9%, Tocantins: 7.7%, Maranhão: 7.5%, Piauí: 4.5% [11,2737].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In order to simulate the application of this gene-editing approach on a diverse within-host virus population, we used a published dataset of HIV sequences obtained from HIV-infected blood donors in Brazil [25], focusing on the pol gene (because it is the most highly conserved) for 10 patients. We started with our list of all pol target sites that we identified above from group and subtype consensus sequences from 2016 LANL alignments, labelling each target site according to the consensus sequence it was identified from (300, 317, 304 and 328 target sites from group M and subtype A-C consensus sequences respectively, 1249 sites total, 897 unique sites).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We started with our list of all pol target sites that we identified above from group and subtype consensus sequences from 2016 LANL alignments, labelling each target site according to the consensus sequence it was identified from (300, 317, 304 and 328 target sites from group M and subtype A-C consensus sequences respectively, 1249 sites total, 897 unique sites). From this combined list of globally conserved target sites, we determined whether each site was present in each patient’s HIV consensus sequence (Tables S4 and S5) [25]. Across infected persons, an average of 89.4 group M target sites (i.e.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…nucleic acid extraction, reverse transcription, PCR, template amplicon preparation for NGS and NGS sequencing) and NGS data processing . The gross error rates generated from short‐read NGS platforms ranges from approximately 1 to 10 errors per 1000 bases leading to increased false positive detection of minority variants when their prevalence falls below approximately 1% . The additional variant QC strategies significantly improve the reliability of calling variants of low abundance, undetectable by Sanger sequencing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%