Los Alamos National 
LaboratoryGo to 
the Lab's 
home pageSearch for people 
in the 
Lab's directorySearch the Laboratory's Web site
 News and Public Affairs  News Releases
Site MapNewsJobsMapsLibrarySearch
   News Releases
 

by Subject
by Organization
by Year

  Publications
  Press Kit
  Other News Sources
  Contacts
     

Ancestor of HIV-1 pandemic strains first occurred about 1930, Los Alamos researchers say

Contact: Kay Roybal, k_roybal@lanl.gov, (505) 665-0582 (00-078)


   

Recent News

* Los Alamos scientist named Asian American Engineer of the Year

* Los Alamos scientist featured in NASA science update

* Los Alamos muon detector could thwart nuclear smugglers

* Wojciech H. Zurek named Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar

* Four Los Alamos physicists honored by American Physical Society

* Los Alamos National Laboratory organizations earn seven out of 13 NNSA Pollution Prevention awards

* Carter Hydrick returns to the Bradbury Science Museum Feb. 15

* Laboratory supports summer science program

* New NASA IBEX mission to carry Los Alamos instrument

* Beason takes top threat reduction post at Los Alamos

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., June 9, 2000 -- Researchers at the Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory estimate that the most recent common ancestor of the HIV-1 strains responsible for the AIDS pandemic occurred about 1930, nearly 30 years earlier than the oldest known HIV-1 positive blood sample.

In a paper published in today's Science magazine, Los Alamos theoretical biologist Bette Korber, physicist Tanmoy Bhattacharya and their colleagues detail how they used the Laboratory's supercomputers to analyze the extensive HIV-1 sequence data compiled at the Los Alamos AIDS and Human Retroviruses Database and estimate the timing of the origins of the strains of HIV that have resulted in the infection of 50 million people. The Database is supported by National Institutes of Health.

"It is important to establish the timing of early events in the AIDS epidemic so that we can begin to examine hypotheses concerning the events surrounding the introduction and spread of HIV in humans," Korber said. "It's also vital to understand the speed with which the virus accumulates mutations so that we can better understand what it will take to design successful vaccines."

HIV is considered to be the result of chimpanzee-to-human transmission since it is most closely related to a group of simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) found in chimpanzees that have a geographic range in West Equatorial Africa. Current evidence suggests that the HIV-1 M group, the main group of viruses, is likely to have resulted from one of those transmission events. Previous efforts to date the most recent common ancestor of the M group have yielded less accurate results because they were based on fewer HIV-1 sequences and used less refined evolutionary models.

In the recent study, physicists Bhattachurya and James Theiler produced a computer code and provided a statistical analysis; the Laboratory's Nirvana supercomputer was used for generating the computationally intensive phylogenetic trees, and a maximum likelihood method was developed for correlating distances between branches in a genetic tree to the passage of time.

Using HIV sequences sampled between 1980 and 1989, Korber created phylogenetic trees to organize the sequences according to their genetic relatedness by using an evolutionary model that incorporates some of the peculiarities of HIV evolution. This tree was then used as a basis to extrapolate back to the most recent common ancestor.

The length of the branches in the immense tree represented the extent of genetic change between HIVs; more closely related viruses are associated and have shorter branches separating them, more distantly related viruses have long branches. The branching patterns were based on calculations performed with the supercomputer, beginning with a comprehensive set of HIV sequences with known dates of sampling.

The researchers then worked backward to estimate the most likely model to describe the evolution of the virus. The rate of evolution determined using this tree - as well as a biologically motivated model for considering error in both time and genetic distance - allowed the researchers to determine the time of the ancestral sequence to be within the first half of the 20th century.

The phylogenetic tree for HIV was calculated using maximum likelihood methods. These are considered among the best methods for answering statistical questions of this kind, but require large amounts of computational resources. Because the researchers used Nirvana, the fastest unclassified supercomputer in the world, they were able to process vast numbers of candidate phylogenies relatively quickly and with considerable accuracy, and to statistically analyze their evolutionary model.

To calculate the time of origin, the researchers used strategies that permitted them either to assume a constant rate of evolution or to factor in a changing rate. Agreement between the two calculations enhanced confidence in the results.

The researchers also tested their methodology by using it to estimate the timing of two historically documented points in the HIV family tree -- the sampling time of the oldest available HIV sequence (1959) and the origin of the epidemic in Thailand (near 1986). The Los Alamos method estimated these events accurately.

The research was funded through Los Alamos' Laboratory-Directed Research and Development program, the National Institutes of Health and the Pediatric AIDS Foundation.

More news releases from the Bioscience (B) Division

Additional news releases related to Biotechnology/Life Science

       
       
 Los Alamos National Laboratory
Operated by the Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's
NNSA   
Inside
| © Copyright 2007-8 Los Alamos National Security, LLC All rights reserved | Disclaimer/Privacy

Last Modified: Monday, 28-Feb-2005 12:38:55 MST
www-news@lanl.gov