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Transmitted/Founder HIV-1 Subtype C Viruses Show Distinctive Signature Patterns in Vif, Vpr, and Vpu That Are Under Subsequent Immune Pressure During Early Infection

Authors :
Raabya Rossenkhan
Paul T. Edlefsen
Zabrina L. Brumme
Iain J. MacLeod
Rosemary Musonda
Theresa K. Sebunya
Craig A. Magaret
Berhanu A. Gashe
Vlad Novitsky
Max Essex
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2016.

Abstract

Viral variants that predominate during early infection may exhibit constrained diversity compared with those found during chronic infection and could contain amino acid signature patterns that may enhance transmission, establish productive infection, and influence early events that modulate the infection course. We compared amino acid distributions in 17 patients recently infected with HIV-1C with patients with chronic infection. We found significantly lower entropy in inferred transmitted/founder (t/f) compared with chronic viruses and identified signature patterns in Vif and Vpr from inferred t/f viruses. We investigated sequence evolution longitudinally up to 500 days postseroconversion and compared the impact of selected substitutions on predicted human leukocyte antigen (HLA) binding affinities of published and predicted cytotoxic T-lymphocyte epitopes. Polymorphisms in Vif and Vpr during early infection occurred more frequently at epitope-HLA anchor residues and significantly decreased predicted epitope-HLA binding. Transmission-associated sequence signatures may have implications for novel strategies to prevent HIV-1 transmission.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c11b1902de5fd44eb091c62408209368