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A recombinant virus assay using full-length envelope sequences to detect changes in HIV-1 co-receptor usage.

Authors :
Dittmar MT
Eichler S
Reinberger S
Henning L
Kräusslich HG
Source :
Virus genes [Virus Genes] 2001 Dec; Vol. 23 (3), pp. 281-90.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

The clinical management of HIV-1 infection has benefited enormously from molecular characterization of drug resistance as well as determination of the viral phenotype in vitro. HIV-1 infected individuals on HAART are currently monitored for the development of drug resistance variants allowing clinicians to redesign drug regimens. An understanding of the molecular basis of the evolution of drug resistance in vivo allows the improvement of the drugs as well as in vitro evaluation of new antiviral compounds alone or in combination with those currently approved. New findings suggest that viral envelopes could be a target to inhibit infection and replication. Therefore the generation of a recombinant virus assay (RVA) to allow the phenotypic determination of drug resistance against entry inhibitors (EI) is anticipated. We constructed an env-deleted clone of HIV-1 using the molecular clone NL-4.3. PCR amplified complete envelope genes (NL-4.3, BaL, primary envelope-genes) were ligated in vitro with a deletion clone (pNL-deltaK) and PM1-cells, supporting the replication of R5- and X4-tropic viruses, were transfected. Determination of co-receptor usage of the harvested recombinant virus-swarm revealed no difference compared to the molecular clones derived individually from three different patients. These results clearly show that an envelope-based RVA is practicable to monitor HIV-co-receptor usage at a given time point. Furthermore, this assay will allow to monitor resistance development against existing and future entry inhibitors and will aid to improve the management of HIV-therapy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0920-8569
Volume :
23
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Virus genes
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11778696
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1012569206007