Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Story of how AIDS traveled to U.S. in question

Virus arrived earlier than with ‘Patient Zero,’ research says

- By ARIANA EUNJUNG CHA

The story of how “Patient Zero” and AIDS arrived in New York in 1979 and triggered the epidemic in North America has been told so many times in so many different ways that for many people it’s become an accepted truth of our modern history.

It begins with a single man, a young flight attendant named Gaetan Dugas, who presumably became infected abroad and then unwittingl­y gave it to some of his sexual partners. His sexual partners in turn gave it to their sexual partners and so forth until the whole continent was full of clusters of people dying of the mysterious disease. In journalist Randy Shilt’s 1987 book, “And the Band Played On,” and in various media reports, he was described as sexually adventurou­s and said to have told Centers for Disease Control investigat­ors he had approximat­ely 250 sexual partners each year.

It’s a compelling narrative, but it’s not quite right.

RECONSTRUC­TING ‘FAMILY TREE’

In a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature, researcher­s used genomic sequencing of blood samples from that era to go back in time and reconstruc­t the “family tree” of the virus in unpreceden­ted detail. The findings are stunning, debunking many popular beliefs about the virus’s origins and spread and filling in holes about how it made its way to the United States.

The work, led by Michael Worobey from the University of Arizona and Richard McKay from the University of Cambridge, confirms the controvers­ial theory that the virus crossed over from the Caribbean — rather than going from the United States to the Caribbean, as some have argued.

The researcher­s also found that it was New York City, not San Francisco, that was the location of the initial outbreak. And they pinpointed that the AIDS virus appeared to have been circulatin­g in our borders for much longer than was previously known, and made the jump in or around 1970, about a decade before it was officially recognized to be in the United States in 1981.

“Geographic­ally there is an unmistakab­le signal that this lineage did diversify in the Caribbean before it moved into the U.S.,” Worobey said in a conference call with journalist­s on Tuesday. But, he added, how the virus got to the United States remains an open question.

“It could have been a person of any nationalit­y. It could have even been blood products. A lot of blood products used in the United States in the 1970s actually came from Haiti,” he said.

The analysis involved looking at archived serum samples, many nearly 40 years old, from studies that were discontinu­ed long ago.

One involved men who have sex with men in New York and San Francisco, and two were of men at risk of contractin­g hepatitis B. A significan­t percentage of the samples — from 3.7 percent to 6.6 percent depending on the study — showed HIV antibodies, and the researcher­s randomly selected 20 to try to try to sequence.

Unfortunat­ely, many were degraded because of having been in longterm storage, so researcher­s spent years trying a number of new techniques to reconstruc­t and “amplify” the viral fragments. Finally, using a technique the researcher­s described as borrowing from the one scientists use to look at DNA from our Neandertha­ls ancestors and other ancient creatures that no longer roam the Earth, they were able to complete the sequences for eight.

These were of five patients from New York and three from San Francisco in 1978-79, which are among the oldest viral samples ever recovered in the world.

VIRUS DIVERSIFIE­D GENETICALL­Y

Researcher­s separately sequenced the virus found in Patient Zero and found that his HIV-1 genome appeared “typical” of U.S. strains of the time and that there was extensive genetic diversity around the time he appears to have been infected, indicating that the virus probably had been in the country and evolving several years earlier.

“He was evidently just one of many thousands infected prior to the recognitio­n of HIV/AIDS,” they wrote in a supplement­ary discussion also published by Nature.

They said that public health investigat­ors at the time had dubbed him “Patient ‘O’” meaning the letter O and not the number zero because he came from ‘Out(side)-of-California’,” but that the letter became confused with the number in the medical literature and popular media and over time became part of the mythology of AIDS despite attempts by some scientists to clarify his role in the epidemic.

‘WIDELY HELD BELIEF’

Worobey, whose expertise is in virus evolution, and McKay, a science historian, wrote that their work shows there is “neither biological nor historical evidence for the widely held belief that he was the primary cause of the HIV epidemic in North America”

“This individual was simply one of thousands infected before HIV/ AIDS was recognized,” McKay said.

In the early days of the AIDS epidemic it wasn’t just Canadian-born Dugas — written about in stories with headlines, such as ‘The man who gave us AIDS’ — who was vilified.

In 1989, the CDC listed people from Haiti as being among the four “high-risk” groups for HIV, along with homosexual­s, heroin users and hemophilia­cs — a designatio­n that sparked discrimina­tion that involved denying people from the country or even their children and grandchild­ren employment, housing and schooling.

Worobey added that an important distinctio­n to make is that their work tracing the origins of the AIDS is not the same as placing blame on any individual or group.

“The pandemic virus ultimately comes from nonhuman primates, probably circulatin­g in sub-Saharan Africa for probably 100 years at this time point today,” Worobey said. “The lineage of the virus we’re talking about in this paper, so-called subtype B of HIV-1 group M, is just one of many branches on that evolutiona­ry tree.”

“No one,” he emphasized, “should be blamed for the spread of a virus no one even knew about.”

 ??  ?? Researcher­s used genomic sequencing of decades-old blood samples to go back in time and reconstruc­t the “family tree” of the AIDS virus in unpreceden­ted detail. The virus’s “family tree” suggests that it arrived in the United States years before...
Researcher­s used genomic sequencing of decades-old blood samples to go back in time and reconstruc­t the “family tree” of the AIDS virus in unpreceden­ted detail. The virus’s “family tree” suggests that it arrived in the United States years before...

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