Scientists have proved that it is highly unlikely that HIV was
spread by contaminated polio vaccine.
It has been suggested that HIV was initially transmitted to
humans in the late 1950s through the use of an oral polio
vaccine.
In his book The River, journalist Edward Hooper alleges
that the vaccine was grown in chimpanzee kidneys and became
contaminated with the simian form of HIV known as SIV.
The polio vaccine did not
contain chimpanzee cells
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However, three independent
studies published in the journal Nature have cast serious
doubts over the controversial theory.
A team from the National Institute for Biological Standards
and Control (NIBSC) in the UK has analysed DNA from frozen
samples of the suspect vaccine.
It found no genetic material from the HIV virus, or from
chimpanzees.
In a second study, scientists from the Pasteur Institute in
Paris, France, carried out a similar analysis and found that
only cells from macaque monkeys were present in the vaccine
samples.
This suggests that macaques and not chimpanzees were used
in the vaccine development - and macaques do not carry SIV.
Writing in Nature, the NIBSC team, led by Dr Neil Berry,
said: "Failure to detect HIV/SIV sequences or chimpanzee
cellular components provides no support for the hypothesis
that these materials were responsible for entry of HIV into
humans and the source of Aids."
HIV subtypes
Macaque monkeys do not carry
HIV-type viruses
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Supporters of the polio
vaccine theory point to the fact that clusters of HIV subtypes
seemed to have appeared at exactly the same time.
They say this can only be explained by a simultaneous
transfer of multiple viruses from chimpanzees to humans via a
contaminated vaccine.
However, this argument has also been debunked by scientists
at Oxford University, UK, and the Laboratoire Retrovirus in
Montpellier, France, who studied the genetic diversity of HIV
in the Congo - the place thought most likely to be the origin
of the virus.
They found the Congo strains had sufficient variation to
have produced all the different types of HIV now found around
the world.
The findings indicate that HIV subtypes could have resulted
from the chance exportation of Congo strains to different
locations, rather than wholesale transmission from chimps.
Neil Berry carried out the
research
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The scientists say it is
likely that the virus was transferred from chimpanzees to
humans in a natural way.
For instance, humans could have become infected by eating
contaminated meat, or by getting cut while out hunting.
Dr Eddie Holmes, a researcher at Oxford's Department of
Zoology, said: "Although it is unlikely that we ever know
exactly how HIV was transferred from chimpanzees to humans,
our results certainly make the polio vaccination theory far
less likely."
Writing in Nature, Dr Robin Weiss, of the Wohlvirion Centre
in London, UK, concludes: "Some beautiful facts have destroyed
an ugly theory."