The origin of the Aids pandemic has
been traced to the 1920s in the city of Kinshasa, in what is now the Democratic
Republic of Congo, scientists say.
An international team of scientists
say a “perfect storm” of population growth, sex and railways allowed HIV to
spread.
A feat of viral archaeology was used
to find the pandemic’s origin, the team report in the journal Science.
They used archived samples of HIV’s
genetic code to trace its source, with evidence pointing to 1920s Kinshasa.
Their report says a roaring sex
trade, rapid population growth and unsterilised needles used in health clinics
probably spread the virus.
Meanwhile Belgium-backed railways
had one million people flowing through the city each year, taking the virus to
neighbouring regions.
Experts said it was a fascinating
insight into the start of the pandemic.
HIV came to global attention in the
1980s and has infected nearly 75 million people.
It has a much longer history in
Africa, but where the pandemic started has remained the source of considerable
debate.
A team at the University of Oxford
and the University of Leuven, in Belgium, tried to reconstruct HIV’s “family
tree” and find out where its oldest ancestors came from.
The research group analysed
mutations in HIV’s genetic code.
“You can see the footprints of
history in today’s genomes, it has left a record, a mutation mark in the HIV
genome that can’t be eradicated,” Prof Oliver Pybus from the University of
Oxford told the BBC.
By reading those mutational marks,
the research team rebuilt the family tree and traced its roots.
HIV is a mutated version of a
chimpanzee virus, known as simian immunodeficiency virus, which probably made
the species-jump through contact with infected blood while handling bush meat.
The virus made the jump on multiple
occasions. One event led to HIV-1 subgroup O which affects tens of thousands in
Cameroon.
Yet only one cross-species jump,
HIV-1 subgroup M, went on to infect millions of people across every country in
the world.
The answer to why this happened lies
in the era of black and white film and the tail-end of the European empires.
In the 1920s, Kinshasa (called
Leopoldville until 1966) was part of the Belgian Congo.
Prof Oliver Pybus said: “It was a
very large and very rapidly growing area and colonial medical records show
there was a high incidence of various sexually transmitted diseases.”
Large numbers of male labourers were
drawn to the city, distorting the gender balance until men outnumbered women
two to one, eventually leading to a roaring sex trade.
Prof Pybus added: “There are two
aspects of infrastructure that could have helped.
“Public health campaigns to treat
people for various infectious diseases with injections seem a plausible route
[for spreading the virus].
“The second really interesting
aspect is the transport networks that enabled people to move round a huge
country.”
Around one million people were using
Kinshasa’s railways by the end of the 1940s.
The virus spread, with neighbouring
Brazzaville and the mining province, Katanga, rapidly hit.
Those “perfect storm” conditions
lasted just a few decades in Kinshasa, but by the time they ended the virus was
already starting to spread around the world.
Prof Jonathan Ball, from the
University of Nottingham, told the BBC: “It’s a fascinating insight into the
early phases of the HIV-1 pandemic.
“It’s the usual suspects that are
most likely to have helped the virus get a foothold in humans – travel,
population increases and human practices such as unsafe healthcare
interventions and prostitution.
“Perhaps the most contentious
suggestion is that the spread of the M-group viruses had more to do with the
conditions being right than it had to do with these viruses being better
adapted for transmission and growth in humans. I’m sure this suggestion will
prompt interesting and lively debate within the field.”
Dr Andrew Freedman, a reader in
infectious diseases at Cardiff University, said: “It does seem an interesting
study demonstrating very elegantly how HIV spread in the Congo region long
before the Aids epidemic was recognised in the early 80s.
“It was already known that HIV in
humans arose by cross species transmission from chimpanzees in that region of
Africa, but this study maps in great detail the spread of the virus from
Kinshasa, it was fascinating to read.”
(BBC)
Aids: Origin Of Pandemic ‘Was 1920s Kinshasa’
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Friday, October 03, 2014
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Reviewed by Unknown
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Friday, October 03, 2014
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