RESUMO
We report the molecular and epidemiological characterization of 128 human T cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) isolates from Brazilian patients with different clinical manifestations of the infection. Thirty-two percent of the patients were asymptomatic, 44% had HTLV-1-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP), and 23% had adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). Phylogenetic analysis performed using part of the LTR region of the viral genome revealed that all Brazilian isolates belonged to the Cosmopolitan subtype, with the following distribution within the Transcontinental subgroup: 81.6% within the Latin American cluster and 15.8% outside the Latin American cluster. Two isolates belonged to the Japanese subgroup. Molecular analysis of the tax region showed a high nucleotide similarity ( approximately 99%) with 41 prototype sequences, including the ATK-1 isolate. The mean number of nucleotide substitutions ranged from 1 to 8. Five specific nucleotide substitutions, C7401T, T7914C, C7920T, C7982T, and G8231A, were highly conserved among the Brazilian isolates (79.6%), with a frequency ranging from 81.6% to 100% in the sample group and from 18.4% to 24.1% in the prototypes used, suggesting the existence of a molecular signature. These changes were not correlated with a specific clinical status of the patients and could be a molecular characteristic of the HTLV-1 strains that circulate in Brazil.