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Influence of mutation and recombination on HIV-1 in vitro fitness recovery
- Source :
- Molecular phylogenetics and evolution. 94
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- The understanding of the evolutionary processes underlying HIV-1 fitness recovery is fundamental for HIV-1 pathogenesis, antiretroviral treatment and vaccine design. It is known that HIV-1 can present very high mutation and recombination rates, however the specific contribution of these evolutionary forces in the "in vitro" viral fitness recovery has not been simultaneously quantified. To this aim, we analyzed substitution, recombination and molecular adaptation rates in a variety of HIV-1 biological clones derived from a viral isolate after severe population bottlenecks and a number of large population cell culture passages. These clones presented an overall but uneven fitness gain, mean of 3-fold, respect to the initial passage values. We found a significant relationship between the fitness increase and the appearance and fixation of mutations. In addition, these fixed mutations presented molecular signatures of positive selection through the accumulation of non-synonymous substitutions. Interestingly, viral recombination correlated with fitness recovery in most of studied viral quasispecies. The genetic diversity generated by these evolutionary processes was positively correlated with the viral fitness. We conclude that HIV-1 fitness recovery can be derived from the genetic heterogeneity generated through both mutation and recombination, and under diversifying molecular adaptation. The findings also suggest nonrandom evolutionary pathways for in vitro fitness recovery.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Genetic Fitness
Adaptation, Biological
HIV Infections
Viral quasispecies
Biology
Evolution, Molecular
03 medical and health sciences
Phylogenetics
Genetics
Humans
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Phylogeny
Recombination, Genetic
Genetic heterogeneity
Robustness (evolution)
Fixation (population genetics)
030104 developmental biology
Population bottleneck
Evolutionary biology
Mutation
HIV-1
Recombination
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10959513
- Volume :
- 94
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular phylogenetics and evolution
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c4b0dee8a775e216ae9bc923f34e3ed9