Loading...
Loading...
On-Air Promo Creative 115x175
|| Health News ||
Page 1 of 1

New Study Traces Origins of HIV to Turn of the Century

A new study conducted by the University of Arizona in Tucson estimates that HIV has existed in human populations for more than a century. The study, conducted by evolutionary biologist Michael Worobey and colleagues, estimates the date of origin at around 1900, which is 30 years earlier than previous analyses.



A new study conducted by the University of Arizona in Tucson estimates that HIV has existed in human populations for more than a century.

The study, conducted by evolutionary biologist Michael Worobey, estimates the date of origin at around 1900, which is 30 years earlier than previous analyses. Worobey based his studies on a biopsy sample recently discovered in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Though HIV-1, the most common strain of the virus, is known to have originated in chimpanzees, tracking its origins has proven more difficult. The first U.S. cases were reported in 1981 when gay men living in urban areas including New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles began experiencing symptoms doctors thought to be similar to pneumonia. The disease was then named GRID -- gay-related immunodeficiency disease-- and later was called AIDS.

The oldest evidence of the virus is from a 1959 blood sample of a man who lived in what was then the Belgian Congo.

To determine a point of origin, scientists relied on studying the mutation rate of different subtypes of the virus. Upon determining a rate of mutation, scientists then essentially ran the clock backward to determine the point where the different subtypes were the same.

"The HIV virus evolves incredibly quickly," geneticist Bette Korber of Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, who did an analysis in 2000, told the Los Angeles Times. "Those mutations get passed on to the next individual. So we have that evolutionary pace to enable a look backward."

Korber’s study of the 1959 sample traced a common ancestor back to roughly 1931.

But the latest study added lymph node tissue from a woman who died in the Congo in 1960. The node was one of many preserved in ice cube-size blocks of paraffin at the University of Kinshasa in the Congo.

With that sample, the study's authors were able to trace a common ancestor to sometime between 1884 and 1924, surmising that the establishment of colonial cities in the Congo around the turn of the century allowed the virus to take hold. (The Advocate)

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Facebook. Page 1 of 1
Reader Comments
  • Name: Chuck Longacre
    Date posted: 10/2/2008 7:37:00 PM
    Hometown: Oklahoma City, OK

    Comment:

    This is an amazing revelation! I'd like to see this studied further and possibly bring more enlightenment to the general population. Perhaps this will bring great education and reduce the HIV/AIDS epidemic we're experiencing today!

  • Name: Keith Mitchell
    Date posted: 10/2/2008 6:10:00 PM
    Hometown: St. Andrew

    Comment:

    Hmm. This makes an interesting read and, if accepted by the wider scientific community, would possibly give the majority of the heterosexual population one less thing to blame on the homosexual community; it would give them a good reason to shove their feet in their mouths! Let's see what happens...



More Online Only
  • Art Slideshow Flag Artist Spotlight: Que Duong

    A fortune-teller told Que Duong's mother he would amount to nothing — which is why he gives everything he has to each photo he takes.

  • Music Thicke and Juicy

    Sexy soul singer Robin Thicke opens up about his Precious wife, homophobia in the music industry, and the gay men who’ve shaped his life and love since childhood. 

  • Internet Herman on Why He Wants to Stop H8

    Fitness trainer, Real World alum, and marriage equality advocate Scott Herman took some time between crunches to tell The Advocate that his concern for gay rights isn't manufactured, and he doesn't mind men checking him out.

  • News Celebration of Courage Not So Courageous

    Advocate contributor Michael Lucas says the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission needs to be doing more to stop violence against gays and lesbians in countries "oppressed by Islam."

  • Commentary The Truth Behind Her Name Was Steven

    Advocate contributor Eden Lane says CNN's Her Name Was Steven will help raise the visibility of trans people on TV, but the most compelling part of Susan Stanton's journey was left to a title card at the end of the film.

  • Television Laverne, Surely

    I Want to Work for Diddy alum Laverne Cox leads a trio of transgender ladies in VH1’s Transform Me, a new makeover show that flatters her hooker-heavy résumé.

  • Music Cherie’s Jubilee

    With The Runaways, the new film about her life with Joan Jett, pioneering rock star Cherie Currie is enjoying a renaissance ... with a little help from Dakota Fanning.

  • Activism Sex-Ed Student Turns Teen Activist

    When sex education classes at Danny Sparks's high school failed to address the issues important to him, he took matters into his own hands ... and became an activist in the process.

  • Photography Slideshow Flag Artist Spotlight: Ryan Colford

    From his "candy shoppe" line — sweet treats made oh-so sexy — to his black and white studies of the male form, photographer Ryan Colford exposes the beauty of the male body.

  • Commentary What Massa Could Learn From Ashburn

    COMMENTARY: Matthew S. Bajko says Republican California state senator Roy Ashburn deserves praise for coming out of the closet despite his antigay voting record. Now, if only former congressman Eric Massa would follow his lead.

  • Music The Truth About Tracy and Kim

    Don’t be tardy for this party! DJ Tracy Young comes clean — mostly — about her rumored lesbian relationship with Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kim Zolciak.

  • News Video Content Flag Kids Say the Darndest Things

    Micah Schraft and his boyfriend, John, were filming Micah's family at Thanksgiving when the 5-year-old son of a family friend wanted to know if the two were husbands. The result is a video you have to see. 

  • Commentary The Importance of Being Counted

    With benefits from boosting hate-crimes and marriage equality laws to simply letting legislators know gay Americans indeed exist, the 2010 Census is a chance to stand up and be counted.

1037 COVER X135 | ADVOCATE.COM