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Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study

BACKGROUND: Mounting evidence indicates that HLA-mediated HIV evolution follows highly stereotypic pathways that result in HLA-associated footprints in HIV at the population level. However, it is not known whether characteristic HLA frequency distributions in different populations have resulted in a...

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Autores principales: Avila-Rios, Santiago, Ormsby, Christopher E, Carlson, Jonathan M, Valenzuela-Ponce, Humberto, Blanco-Heredia, Juan, Garrido-Rodriguez, Daniela, Garcia-Morales, Claudia, Heckerman, David, Brumme, Zabrina L, Mallal, Simon, John, Mina, Espinosa, Enrique, Reyes-Teran, Gustavo
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2734549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19664284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-72
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author Avila-Rios, Santiago
Ormsby, Christopher E
Carlson, Jonathan M
Valenzuela-Ponce, Humberto
Blanco-Heredia, Juan
Garrido-Rodriguez, Daniela
Garcia-Morales, Claudia
Heckerman, David
Brumme, Zabrina L
Mallal, Simon
John, Mina
Espinosa, Enrique
Reyes-Teran, Gustavo
author_facet Avila-Rios, Santiago
Ormsby, Christopher E
Carlson, Jonathan M
Valenzuela-Ponce, Humberto
Blanco-Heredia, Juan
Garrido-Rodriguez, Daniela
Garcia-Morales, Claudia
Heckerman, David
Brumme, Zabrina L
Mallal, Simon
John, Mina
Espinosa, Enrique
Reyes-Teran, Gustavo
author_sort Avila-Rios, Santiago
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Mounting evidence indicates that HLA-mediated HIV evolution follows highly stereotypic pathways that result in HLA-associated footprints in HIV at the population level. However, it is not known whether characteristic HLA frequency distributions in different populations have resulted in additional unique footprints. METHODS: The phylogenetic dependency network model was applied to assess HLA-mediated evolution in datasets of HIV pol sequences from free plasma viruses and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC)-integrated proviruses in an immunogenetically unique cohort of Mexican individuals. Our data were compared with data from the IHAC cohort, a large multi-center cohort of individuals from Canada, Australia and the USA. RESULTS: Forty three different HLA-HIV codon associations representing 30 HLA-HIV codon pairs were observed in the Mexican cohort (q < 0.2). Strikingly, 23 (53%) of these associations differed from those observed in the well-powered IHAC cohort, strongly suggesting the existence of unique characteristics in HLA-mediated HIV evolution in the Mexican cohort. Furthermore, 17 of the 23 novel associations involved HLA alleles whose frequencies were not significantly different from those in IHAC, suggesting that their detection was not due to increased statistical power but to differences in patterns of epitope targeting. Interestingly, the consensus differed in four positions between the two cohorts and three of these positions could be explained by HLA-associated selection. Additionally, different HLA-HIV codon associations were seen when comparing HLA-mediated selection in plasma viruses and PBMC archived proviruses at the population level, with a significantly lower number of associations in the proviral dataset. CONCLUSION: Our data support universal HLA-mediated HIV evolution at the population level, resulting in detectable HLA-associated footprints in the circulating virus. However, it also strongly suggests that unique genetic backgrounds in different HIV-infected populations may influence HIV evolution in a particular direction as particular HLA-HIV codon associations are determined by specific HLA frequency distributions. Our analysis also suggests a dynamic HLA-associated evolution in HIV with fewer HLA-HIV codon associations observed in the proviral compartment, which is likely enriched in early archived HIV sequences, compared to the plasma virus compartment. These results highlight the importance of comparative HIV evolutionary studies in immunologically different populations worldwide.
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spelling pubmed-27345492009-08-29 Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study Avila-Rios, Santiago Ormsby, Christopher E Carlson, Jonathan M Valenzuela-Ponce, Humberto Blanco-Heredia, Juan Garrido-Rodriguez, Daniela Garcia-Morales, Claudia Heckerman, David Brumme, Zabrina L Mallal, Simon John, Mina Espinosa, Enrique Reyes-Teran, Gustavo Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: Mounting evidence indicates that HLA-mediated HIV evolution follows highly stereotypic pathways that result in HLA-associated footprints in HIV at the population level. However, it is not known whether characteristic HLA frequency distributions in different populations have resulted in additional unique footprints. METHODS: The phylogenetic dependency network model was applied to assess HLA-mediated evolution in datasets of HIV pol sequences from free plasma viruses and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC)-integrated proviruses in an immunogenetically unique cohort of Mexican individuals. Our data were compared with data from the IHAC cohort, a large multi-center cohort of individuals from Canada, Australia and the USA. RESULTS: Forty three different HLA-HIV codon associations representing 30 HLA-HIV codon pairs were observed in the Mexican cohort (q < 0.2). Strikingly, 23 (53%) of these associations differed from those observed in the well-powered IHAC cohort, strongly suggesting the existence of unique characteristics in HLA-mediated HIV evolution in the Mexican cohort. Furthermore, 17 of the 23 novel associations involved HLA alleles whose frequencies were not significantly different from those in IHAC, suggesting that their detection was not due to increased statistical power but to differences in patterns of epitope targeting. Interestingly, the consensus differed in four positions between the two cohorts and three of these positions could be explained by HLA-associated selection. Additionally, different HLA-HIV codon associations were seen when comparing HLA-mediated selection in plasma viruses and PBMC archived proviruses at the population level, with a significantly lower number of associations in the proviral dataset. CONCLUSION: Our data support universal HLA-mediated HIV evolution at the population level, resulting in detectable HLA-associated footprints in the circulating virus. However, it also strongly suggests that unique genetic backgrounds in different HIV-infected populations may influence HIV evolution in a particular direction as particular HLA-HIV codon associations are determined by specific HLA frequency distributions. Our analysis also suggests a dynamic HLA-associated evolution in HIV with fewer HLA-HIV codon associations observed in the proviral compartment, which is likely enriched in early archived HIV sequences, compared to the plasma virus compartment. These results highlight the importance of comparative HIV evolutionary studies in immunologically different populations worldwide. BioMed Central 2009-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC2734549/ /pubmed/19664284 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-72 Text en Copyright © 2009 Avila-Rios 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
Avila-Rios, Santiago
Ormsby, Christopher E
Carlson, Jonathan M
Valenzuela-Ponce, Humberto
Blanco-Heredia, Juan
Garrido-Rodriguez, Daniela
Garcia-Morales, Claudia
Heckerman, David
Brumme, Zabrina L
Mallal, Simon
John, Mina
Espinosa, Enrique
Reyes-Teran, Gustavo
Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title_full Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title_fullStr Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title_full_unstemmed Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title_short Unique features of HLA-mediated HIV evolution in a Mexican cohort: a comparative study
title_sort unique features of hla-mediated hiv evolution in a mexican cohort: a comparative study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2734549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19664284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-72
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