Q and A

Question

What is the difference between HIV-1 and HIV-2?

What is the difference between HIV1 and HIV2 with regards to structure, function, occurence and survival in the environment?

Answer

HIV-1 and HIV-2 are two different viruses. HIV-1 is the main family of HIV and accounts for 95% of all infections worldwide. HIV-2 is mainly seen in a few West African countries. The spread in the rest of the world is negligible.

Although HIV-2 generally progresses more slowly than HIV-1, some HIV drugs (NNRTIs like nevirapine and efavirenz) do not work against HIV-2.

On a structural level HIV-1 and HIV-2 have important genetic differences. A technical description of the difference is that the vpu gene found in HIV-1 is replaced by the vpx gene in HIV-2. In addition, the protease enzymes from the two viruses, which are aspartic acid proteases and have been found to be essential for maturation of the infectious particle, share about 50% sequence identity.

There are, however, differences in substrate and inhibitor binding between these enzymes. Most notably between the CGP 53820 inhibitory binding.

On functional level, there is a difference between the two viruses in terms of how easy it is for the virus to infect someone. HIV-1 enters the immune system by attaching onto the CD4+ receptor found on the surface of certain white blood cells. HIV-2 has a harder time gaining such a foothold.

So HIV-2 generally progresses much more slowly, with lower viral laod and slower risk of becoming sick. However, some HIV drugs (including NNRTIs) are not active against HIV-2.

Both viruses are fragile and highly susceptible to physical and chemical agents and therefore do not survive well outside the human body. HIV in blood or sexual fluid for example is not infectious after it has been outside the body for a few minutes.

Notes: this answer was updated in January 2018.

91 comments

  1. Robin Jakob

    Hi,

    This is possible. If you have both it is important to know that some meds that work for HIV 1 do not work for HIV 2. This includes efavirenz and nevirapine. You should also talk to your doctor or clinic about this.

  2. young

    is it possible to have both HIV 1 &2 at a time

  3. Rebecca McDowall

    Rakhi,
    Life expectancy is dependent on several factors- when somebody is diagnosed, if they get treatment, their gender, where they live and so on. Life expectancy can be very different between countries and between rich people and poor people. With the right treatment though somebody with HIV-2 id likely to have a similar life expectancy as an HIV negative person in a similar situation. There are lots of questions about life expectancy here.

  4. rakhi

    what is the life expectancy of HIV2 PATIENTS……..I WANT CLEAR AND DETAIL ANSWER

  5. Rebecca McDowall

    Hi,
    HIV-2 is most commonly found in West Africa, but there are people in many countries who are infected with HIV-2. the AIDSMAP website has more information about HIV-2.

  6. nurse kebedeabebe

    hiv1 or hiv2 more African disease?

  7. Nelinsky

    Extremely invaluable information.It really helped me in my examinations.

  8. Rebecca McDowall

    Thank-you for the positive feedback!

  9. Cornelius

    This is a very useful information.
    Keep it up

  10. ravi

    it is good information

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