Cargando…

Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses

BACKGROUND: Lentiviruses such as human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV) undergo continual evolution in the host. Previous studies showed that the late-stage variants of SIV that evolve in one host replicate to significantly higher levels when transmitted to a new host. However, it i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Eastman, Dawnnica, Piantadosi, Anne, Wu, Xueling, Forthal, Donald N, Landucci, Gary, Kimata, Jason T, Overbaugh, Julie
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18680596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-5-90
_version_ 1782158542302609408
author Eastman, Dawnnica
Piantadosi, Anne
Wu, Xueling
Forthal, Donald N
Landucci, Gary
Kimata, Jason T
Overbaugh, Julie
author_facet Eastman, Dawnnica
Piantadosi, Anne
Wu, Xueling
Forthal, Donald N
Landucci, Gary
Kimata, Jason T
Overbaugh, Julie
author_sort Eastman, Dawnnica
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lentiviruses such as human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV) undergo continual evolution in the host. Previous studies showed that the late-stage variants of SIV that evolve in one host replicate to significantly higher levels when transmitted to a new host. However, it is unknown whether HIVs or SIVs that have higher replication fitness are more genetically stable upon transmission to a new host. To begin to address this, we analyzed the envelope sequence variation of viruses that evolved in animals infected with variants of SIVMne that had been cloned from an index animal at different stages of infection. RESULTS: We found that there was more evolution of envelope sequences from animals infected with the late-stage, highly replicating variants than in animals infected with the early-stage, lower replicating variant, despite the fact that the late virus had already diversified considerably from the early virus in the first host, prior to transmission. Many of the changes led to the addition or shift in potential-glycosylation sites-, and surprisingly, these changes emerged in some cases prior to the detection of neutralizing antibody responses, suggesting that other selection mechanisms may be important in driving virus evolution. Interestingly, these changes occurred after the development of antibody whose anti-viral function is dependent on Fc-Fcγ receptor interactions. CONCLUSION: SIV variants that had achieved high replication fitness and escape from neutralizing antibodies in one host continued to evolve upon transmission to a new host. Selection for viral variants with glycosylation and other envelope changes may have been driven by both neutralizing and Fcγ receptor-mediated antibody activities.
format Text
id pubmed-2518139
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25181392008-08-20 Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses Eastman, Dawnnica Piantadosi, Anne Wu, Xueling Forthal, Donald N Landucci, Gary Kimata, Jason T Overbaugh, Julie Virol J Research BACKGROUND: Lentiviruses such as human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV) undergo continual evolution in the host. Previous studies showed that the late-stage variants of SIV that evolve in one host replicate to significantly higher levels when transmitted to a new host. However, it is unknown whether HIVs or SIVs that have higher replication fitness are more genetically stable upon transmission to a new host. To begin to address this, we analyzed the envelope sequence variation of viruses that evolved in animals infected with variants of SIVMne that had been cloned from an index animal at different stages of infection. RESULTS: We found that there was more evolution of envelope sequences from animals infected with the late-stage, highly replicating variants than in animals infected with the early-stage, lower replicating variant, despite the fact that the late virus had already diversified considerably from the early virus in the first host, prior to transmission. Many of the changes led to the addition or shift in potential-glycosylation sites-, and surprisingly, these changes emerged in some cases prior to the detection of neutralizing antibody responses, suggesting that other selection mechanisms may be important in driving virus evolution. Interestingly, these changes occurred after the development of antibody whose anti-viral function is dependent on Fc-Fcγ receptor interactions. CONCLUSION: SIV variants that had achieved high replication fitness and escape from neutralizing antibodies in one host continued to evolve upon transmission to a new host. Selection for viral variants with glycosylation and other envelope changes may have been driven by both neutralizing and Fcγ receptor-mediated antibody activities. BioMed Central 2008-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2518139/ /pubmed/18680596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-5-90 Text en Copyright © 2008 Eastman 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
Eastman, Dawnnica
Piantadosi, Anne
Wu, Xueling
Forthal, Donald N
Landucci, Gary
Kimata, Jason T
Overbaugh, Julie
Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title_full Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title_fullStr Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title_full_unstemmed Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title_short Heavily glycosylated, highly fit SIVMne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
title_sort heavily glycosylated, highly fit sivmne variants continue to diversify and undergo selection after transmission to a new host and they elicit early antibody dependent cellular responses but delayed neutralizing antibody responses
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18680596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-5-90
work_keys_str_mv AT eastmandawnnica heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT piantadosianne heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT wuxueling heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT forthaldonaldn heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT landuccigary heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT kimatajasont heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses
AT overbaughjulie heavilyglycosylatedhighlyfitsivmnevariantscontinuetodiversifyandundergoselectionaftertransmissiontoanewhostandtheyelicitearlyantibodydependentcellularresponsesbutdelayedneutralizingantibodyresponses