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Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination

BACKGROUND: HIV-1 recombination between different subtypes has a major impact on the global epidemic. The generation of these intersubtype recombinants follows a defined set of events starting with dual infection of a host cell, heterodiploid virus production, strand transfers during reverse transcr...

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Autores principales: Baird, Heather A, Gao, Yong, Galetto, Román, Lalonde, Matthew, Anthony, Reshma M, Giacomoni, Véronique, Abreha, Measho, Destefano, Jeffrey J, Negroni, Matteo, Arts, Eric J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1764423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17164002
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-3-91
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author Baird, Heather A
Gao, Yong
Galetto, Román
Lalonde, Matthew
Anthony, Reshma M
Giacomoni, Véronique
Abreha, Measho
Destefano, Jeffrey J
Negroni, Matteo
Arts, Eric J
author_facet Baird, Heather A
Gao, Yong
Galetto, Román
Lalonde, Matthew
Anthony, Reshma M
Giacomoni, Véronique
Abreha, Measho
Destefano, Jeffrey J
Negroni, Matteo
Arts, Eric J
author_sort Baird, Heather A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: HIV-1 recombination between different subtypes has a major impact on the global epidemic. The generation of these intersubtype recombinants follows a defined set of events starting with dual infection of a host cell, heterodiploid virus production, strand transfers during reverse transcription, and then selection. In this study, recombination frequencies were measured in the C1-C4 regions of the envelope gene in the presence (using a multiple cycle infection system) and absence (in vitro reverse transcription and single cycle infection systems) of selection for replication-competent virus. Ugandan subtypes A and D HIV-1 env sequences (115-A, 120-A, 89-D, 122-D, 126-D) were employed in all three assay systems. These subtypes co-circulate in East Africa and frequently recombine in this human population. RESULTS: Increased sequence identity between viruses or RNA templates resulted in increased recombination frequencies, with the exception of the 115-A virus or RNA template. Analyses of the recombination breakpoints and mechanistic studies revealed that the presence of a recombination hotspot in the C3/V4 env region, unique to 115-A as donor RNA, could account for the higher recombination frequencies with the 115-A virus/template. Single-cycle infections supported proportionally less recombination than the in vitro reverse transcription assay but both systems still had significantly higher recombination frequencies than observed in the multiple-cycle virus replication system. In the multiple cycle assay, increased replicative fitness of one HIV-1 over the other in a dual infection dramatically decreased recombination frequencies. CONCLUSION: Sequence variation at specific sites between HIV-1 isolates can introduce unique recombination hotspots, which increase recombination frequencies and skew the general observation that decreased HIV-1 sequence identity reduces recombination rates. These findings also suggest that the majority of intra- or intersubtype A/D HIV-1 recombinants, generated with each round of infection, are not replication-competent and do not survive in the multiple-cycle system. Ability of one HIV-1 isolate to outgrow the other leads to reduced co-infections, heterozygous virus production, and recombination frequencies.
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spelling pubmed-17644232007-01-06 Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination Baird, Heather A Gao, Yong Galetto, Román Lalonde, Matthew Anthony, Reshma M Giacomoni, Véronique Abreha, Measho Destefano, Jeffrey J Negroni, Matteo Arts, Eric J Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: HIV-1 recombination between different subtypes has a major impact on the global epidemic. The generation of these intersubtype recombinants follows a defined set of events starting with dual infection of a host cell, heterodiploid virus production, strand transfers during reverse transcription, and then selection. In this study, recombination frequencies were measured in the C1-C4 regions of the envelope gene in the presence (using a multiple cycle infection system) and absence (in vitro reverse transcription and single cycle infection systems) of selection for replication-competent virus. Ugandan subtypes A and D HIV-1 env sequences (115-A, 120-A, 89-D, 122-D, 126-D) were employed in all three assay systems. These subtypes co-circulate in East Africa and frequently recombine in this human population. RESULTS: Increased sequence identity between viruses or RNA templates resulted in increased recombination frequencies, with the exception of the 115-A virus or RNA template. Analyses of the recombination breakpoints and mechanistic studies revealed that the presence of a recombination hotspot in the C3/V4 env region, unique to 115-A as donor RNA, could account for the higher recombination frequencies with the 115-A virus/template. Single-cycle infections supported proportionally less recombination than the in vitro reverse transcription assay but both systems still had significantly higher recombination frequencies than observed in the multiple-cycle virus replication system. In the multiple cycle assay, increased replicative fitness of one HIV-1 over the other in a dual infection dramatically decreased recombination frequencies. CONCLUSION: Sequence variation at specific sites between HIV-1 isolates can introduce unique recombination hotspots, which increase recombination frequencies and skew the general observation that decreased HIV-1 sequence identity reduces recombination rates. These findings also suggest that the majority of intra- or intersubtype A/D HIV-1 recombinants, generated with each round of infection, are not replication-competent and do not survive in the multiple-cycle system. Ability of one HIV-1 isolate to outgrow the other leads to reduced co-infections, heterozygous virus production, and recombination frequencies. BioMed Central 2006-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1764423/ /pubmed/17164002 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-3-91 Text en Copyright © 2006 Baird et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Baird, Heather A
Gao, Yong
Galetto, Román
Lalonde, Matthew
Anthony, Reshma M
Giacomoni, Véronique
Abreha, Measho
Destefano, Jeffrey J
Negroni, Matteo
Arts, Eric J
Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title_full Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title_fullStr Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title_full_unstemmed Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title_short Influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype HIV-1 recombination
title_sort influence of sequence identity and unique breakpoints on the frequency of intersubtype hiv-1 recombination
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1764423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17164002
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-3-91
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