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Sequence of a novel simian immunodeficiency virus from a wild-caught African mandrill.

by: H. Tsujimoto, A. Hasegawa, N. Maki, M. Fukasawa, T. Miura, S. Speidel, R. W. Cooper, E. N. Moriyama, T. Gojobori, M. Hayami
Nature, Vol. 341, No. 6242. (12 October 1989), pp. 539-541, doi:10.1038/341539a0  Key: citeulike:12144456

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Abstract

Since the isolation of an HIV-2-related virus from captive macaques (SIVMAC), the origin of human immunodeficiency viruses, a much debated subject, has been attributed to monkeys. The sequence of SIVAGM, which is derived from a naturally infected African green monkey, shows equal relatedness to HIV-1 and HIV-2, suggesting that the derivation of these viruses from SIVAGM is unlikely. Recent sequence analysis of SIV from a captive sooty mangabey (SIVMAC), however, shows its close relatedness to HIV-2 and SIVMAC, indicating a possible origin of HIV-2 and SIVMAC from SIVSM (refs 4, 7, 9). We report here the sequence of a novel simian lentivirus, SIVMND, isolated from a wild-caught mandrill in Africa. It is distinct from the three other main groups, HIV-1, HIV-2/SIVMAC/SIVSM and SIVAGM, and therefore represents a fourth main group of primate lentiviruses. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that these four main virus groups might have diverged from a common ancestor at about the same time, long before the spread of AIDS in humans.


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