Cuba, a variant of HIV that is much more aggressive than other known
forms of the virus has been documented. Patients infected with this new
variant progress to AIDS so rapidly that they may not even know they are
infected, with AIDS symptoms occurring within 3 years of infection.
If a person contracts multiple strains of HIV
- typically by engaging in unprotected sex with multiple infected
partners - then these strains can recombine into a new variant of HIV
within the host. The new Cuban variant of HIV is one such recombinant
version of the virus.
HIV anchors itself to co-receptors - proteins on the membranes of cells -
before the virus is able to penetrate the cell. The first co-receptor
that HIV anchors to is known as CCR5. Then, after a number of years of
normal health, the virus switches to the anchor point CXCR4, which
results in a faster progression to AIDS.
In the recombinant form of HIV identified in Cuba, HIV makes the
transition to CXCR4 shortly after infection, reducing the healthy phase
and initiating the progression to AIDS.
An international team of researchers compared the blood of 73
recently-infected patients with this recombinant form of HIV - of whom
52 had been diagnosed with AIDS - with blood from 22 patients who had
progressed to AIDS after the normal "healthy" period of infection with
HIV.
The patients with the recombinant HIV were found to have abnormally high
doses of the virus and defensive molecules called RANTES.
RANTES is part of the human immune response and binds to CCR5 - the
co-receptor that HIV initially anchors onto after infection.
Because RANTES is present at higher concentrations in these patients
than normal, it suggests that most of the CCR5 proteins were unavailable
as anchor points for HIV. Therefore, the recombinant HIV would have to
bypass its usual anchor point, heading straight to CXCR4 instead.
Protease in recombinant variant boosts virus replication
One of the HIV subtypes implicated in the recombinant variant was also
found to contain a protease - an enzyme that cleaves proteins in new
viruses - that enables the virus to replicate in greater numbers. The
researchers suggest that this protease makes it easier for the
transition to CXCR4 to occur.
Normally, say the authors of the study - which is published in the journal EBioMedicine - the transition from CCR5 to CXCR4 is "very difficult."
Recently, Medical News Today reported on a study published in the journal Cell that explored the theory that pools of dormant HIV lurking in DNA may hold a potential cure for the infection.
We also looked at a new smartphone accessory purportedly capable of diagnosing HIV and syphilis
from one finger prick of blood within 15 minutes. This accessory - or
"dongle" - has been piloted among health care workers in Rwanda, with
97% of patients recommending the device. With a manufacturing cost of
just $34, the dongle is much more affordable than the standard forms of
diagnostic testing, which typically cost $18,450.
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