Key Viral Adaptations Preceding the AIDS Pandemic

HIV, the causative agent of AIDS, has a complex evolutionary history involving several cross-species transmissions and recombination events as well as changes in the repertoire and function of its accessory genes. Understanding these events and the adaptations to new host species provides key insigh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCell host & microbe Vol. 25; no. 1; pp. 27 - 38
Main Authors Sauter, Daniel, Kirchhoff, Frank
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 09.01.2019
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Summary:HIV, the causative agent of AIDS, has a complex evolutionary history involving several cross-species transmissions and recombination events as well as changes in the repertoire and function of its accessory genes. Understanding these events and the adaptations to new host species provides key insights into innate defense mechanisms, viral dependencies on cellular factors, and prerequisites for the emergence of the AIDS pandemic. In addition, understanding the factors and adaptations required for the spread of HIV in the human population helps to better assess the risk of future lentiviral zoonoses and provides clues to how improved control of viral replication can be achieved. Here, we summarize our current knowledge on viral features and adaptations preceding the AIDS pandemic. We aim at providing a viral point of view, focusing on known key hurdles of each cross-species transmission and the mechanisms that HIV and its simian precursors evolved to overcome them. Simian immunodeficiency viruses crossed the barrier from great apes and monkeys to humans on at least 13 occasions, but only a single transmission is responsible for the AIDS pandemic. Sauter and Kirchhoff summarize the cross-species transmission events and adaptations allowing pandemic HIV-1 strains to spread efficiently in the human population.
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ISSN:1931-3128
1934-6069
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2018.12.002