1. Differential evolution of a CXCR4-using HIV-1 strain in CCR5wt/wt and CCR5∆32/∆32 hosts revealed by longitudinal deep sequencing and phylogenetic reconstruction.
- Author
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Le AQ, Taylor J, Dong W, McCloskey R, Woods C, Danroth R, Hayashi K, Milloy MJ, Poon AF, and Brumme ZL
- Subjects
- Biological Evolution, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 genetics, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear, Peptide Fragments genetics, RNA, Viral, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism, Receptors, CXCR4 genetics, Viral Load, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Phylogeny, Receptors, CCR5 genetics, Receptors, CXCR4 metabolism
- Abstract
Rare individuals homozygous for a naturally-occurring 32 base pair deletion in the CCR5 gene (CCR5∆32/∆32) are resistant to infection by CCR5-using ("R5") HIV-1 strains but remain susceptible to less common CXCR4-using ("X4") strains. The evolutionary dynamics of X4 infections however, remain incompletely understood. We identified two individuals, one CCR5wt/wt and one CCR5∆32/∆32, within the Vancouver Injection Drug Users Study who were infected with a genetically similar X4 HIV-1 strain. While early-stage plasma viral loads were comparable in the two individuals (~4.5-5 log10 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml), CD4 counts in the CCR5wt/wt individual reached a nadir of <20 CD4 cells/mm(3) within 17 months but remained >250 cells/mm(3) in the CCR5∆32/∆32 individual. Ancestral phylogenetic reconstructions using longitudinal envelope-V3 deep sequences suggested that both individuals were infected by a single transmitted/founder (T/F) X4 virus that differed at only one V3 site (codon 24). While substantial within-host HIV-1 V3 diversification was observed in plasma and PBMC in both individuals, the CCR5wt/wt individual's HIV-1 population gradually reverted from 100% X4 to ~60% R5 over ~4 years whereas the CCR5∆32/∆32 individual's remained consistently X4. Our observations illuminate early dynamics of X4 HIV-1 infections and underscore the influence of CCR5 genotype on HIV-1 V3 evolution.
- Published
- 2015
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