Article PreviewSolved: The mystery of how AIDS left Africa
THE global pandemic could have been so different. After AIDS was recognised in the US in 1981, many cases were found in Haitians, but it was never clear how Haiti figured in the epidemic. Now Thomas Gilbert at the University of Arizona at Tucson and colleagues have analysed HIV samples collected from five Haitians living in Miami in 1982, and their relationship to 117 HIV samples from 19 other countries. The resulting "family tree" makes it clear that a virus originating in Haiti was the ancestor of virtually all HIV outside Africa, making Haiti the "stepping stone" from Africa to the world (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0705329104). Comparison with African viruses showed HIV arrived in Haiti, probably in one person, in about 1966, at a time when many Haitians were working in newly independent Congo. Then in 1969 HIV spread to the US - ... The complete article is 369 words long.
If you are in the UK please
click here
, if you are in Canada please
click here.
Users in Australia or New Zealand please click here.
|
PERSONAL SUBSCRIBERSINSTITUTIONAL SUBSCRIBERSINSTITUTIONAL IP LOGINATHENS LOGIN
New Scientist Full Access is available free to magazine subscribersSubscribe today at only USD $4.95 for your first 4 issues and get New Scientist, the world's leading science & technology news magazine delivered direct to your door every week As a magazine subscriber you will benefit from instant access to:
Subscribe now |