Two chimpanzees, one (C-499) infected with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated retrovirus type 2 (ARV-2) strain of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and one (C-560) infected with the lymphadenopathy-associated virus type 1 (LAV-1) strain of HIV, were inoculated with approximately 104 tissue culture infective doses of the reciprocal strain. At the time of the second inoculation, both chimpanzees had high titers of HIV-specific antibodies, including antibodies that neutralized both virus strains. After inoculation of the second strain of HIV, the antibody titers in both chimpanzees increased 4to 10-fold, and in one chimpanzee (C-499), the numbers of infectious peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) increased 1,000-fold to levels that are comparable with those observed after primary HIV infections. By restriction enzyme analysis of virus recovered from PBMC, both ARV-2 and LAV-1 were identified in C-499, thus demonstrating that superinfection had occurred.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (Z321 designate, HIV-1Z321), the oldest known HIV, was isolated from a serum sample collected in Zaire in 1976 and was molecularly cloned. Restriction enzyme analysis of unintegrated viral DNA revealed the presence of conserved restriction enzyme cleavage sites in the long terminal repeat sequences. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the 3' end of the viral DNA revealed a pattern similar to other HIV-1 isolates described. However, some of the common restriction sites present in other isolates were absent in HIV-1Z321. The extent of differences between HIV-1Z321 and recent isolates from North America and Zaire was 17.86-18.36% on the nucleotide sequence level and 26.5-33.2% difference in the predicted amino acid sequence in the envelope gene. Differences were also noted in 3'-orf (nef: according to HIV gene nomenclature; see Ref. 42) gene and U3 region of the long terminal repeat sequences of HIV-1Z321 and other isolates. Nucleotide sequence of a HIV-1 isolate, 12 years apart from the present isolates, will provide an important time calibration point for the evolutionary divergence of HIV isolates. Hybrid HIV was also generated by transfecting HIV-1Z321 and HIV-1HTLV-III viral DNAs into cells.
The genetic diversity of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) isolated from transfusion-associated AIDS patients has been examined. Restriction enzyme mapping studies of integrated proviral DNA of donor and recipient origin demonstrated genomic variation between isolates. Analysis of the molecularly cloned viral genomes of one donor-recipient pair showed that virus from the recipient had restriction enzyme site differences from the donor, noticeably clustered in the env and orf-2 regions, and also had a greater number of restriction sites in common with the donor as well. These results suggest that HIV may undergo genomic variation in vivo. Comparison of donor-recipient viruses may further the understanding of the molecular basis for AIDS pathogenesis.
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