Back to Search Start Over

HIV-1 V3 envelope deep sequencing for clinical plasma specimens failing in phenotypic tropism assays

Authors :
Vandenbroucke, Ina
Van Marck, Herwig
Mostmans, Wendy
Van Eygen, Veerle
Rondelez, Evelien
Thys, Kim
Van Baelen, Kurt
Fransen, Katrien
Vaira, Dolores
Kabeya, Kabamba
De Wit, Stéphane
Florence, Eric
Moutschen, Michel
Vandekerckhove, Linos
Verhofstede, Chris
Stuyver, Lieven
Vandenbroucke, Ina
Van Marck, Herwig
Mostmans, Wendy
Van Eygen, Veerle
Rondelez, Evelien
Thys, Kim
Van Baelen, Kurt
Fransen, Katrien
Vaira, Dolores
Kabeya, Kabamba
De Wit, Stéphane
Florence, Eric
Moutschen, Michel
Vandekerckhove, Linos
Verhofstede, Chris
Stuyver, Lieven
Source :
AIDS Research and Therapy, 7
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background: HIV-1 infected patients for whom standard gp160 phenotypic tropism testing failed are currently excluded from co-receptor antagonist treatment. To provide patients with maximal treatment options, massively parallel sequencing of the envelope V3 domain, in combination with tropism prediction tools, was evaluated as an alternative tropism determination strategy. Plasma samples from twelve HIV-1 infected individuals with failing phenotyping results were available. The samples were submitted to massive parallel sequencing and to confirmatory recombinant phenotyping using a fraction of the gp120 domain.Results: A cut-off for sequence reads interpretation of 5 to10 times the sequencing error rate (0.2%) was implemented. On average, each sample contained 7 different V3 haplotypes. V3 haplotypes were submitted to tropism prediction algorithms, and 4/14 samples returned with presence of a dual/mixed (D/M) tropic virus, respectively at 3%, 10%, 11%, and 95% of the viral quasispecies. V3 tropism prediction was confirmed by gp120 phenotyping, except for two out of 4 D/M predicted viruses (with 3 and 95%) which were phenotypically R5-tropic. In the first case, the result was discordant due to the limit of detection for the phenotyping technology, while in the latter case the prediction algorithms were not computing the viral tropism correctly.Conclusions: Although only demonstrated on a limited set of samples, the potential of the combined use of "deep sequencing + prediction algorithms" in cases where routine gp160 phenotype testing cannot be employed was illustrated. While good concordance was observed between gp120 phenotyping and prediction of R5-tropic virus, the results suggest that accurate prediction of X4-tropic virus would require further algorithm development. © 2010 Vandenbroucke et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
AIDS Research and Therapy, 7
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363698882
Document Type :
Electronic Resource