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RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy

BACKGROUND: To study the dynamics of wild-type and drug-resistant HIV-1 RT variants, we developed a methodology that follows the fates of individual genomes over time within the viral quasispecies. Single genome sequences were obtained from 3 pigtail macaques infected with a recombinant simian immun...

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Autores principales: Shao, Wei, Kearney, Mary, Maldarelli, Frank, Mellors, John W, Stephens, Robert M, Lifson, Jeffrey D, KewalRamani, Vineet N, Ambrose, Zandrea, Coffin, John M, Palmer, Sarah E
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2776578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19889213
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-101
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author Shao, Wei
Kearney, Mary
Maldarelli, Frank
Mellors, John W
Stephens, Robert M
Lifson, Jeffrey D
KewalRamani, Vineet N
Ambrose, Zandrea
Coffin, John M
Palmer, Sarah E
author_facet Shao, Wei
Kearney, Mary
Maldarelli, Frank
Mellors, John W
Stephens, Robert M
Lifson, Jeffrey D
KewalRamani, Vineet N
Ambrose, Zandrea
Coffin, John M
Palmer, Sarah E
author_sort Shao, Wei
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To study the dynamics of wild-type and drug-resistant HIV-1 RT variants, we developed a methodology that follows the fates of individual genomes over time within the viral quasispecies. Single genome sequences were obtained from 3 pigtail macaques infected with a recombinant simian immunodeficiency virus containing the RT coding region from HIV-1 (RT-SHIV) and treated with short-course efavirenz monotherapy 13 weeks post-infection followed by daily combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) beginning at week 17. Bioinformatics tools were constructed to trace individual genomes from the beginning of infection to the end of the treatment. RESULTS: A well characterized challenge RT-SHIV inoculum was used to infect three monkeys. The RT-SHIV inoculum had 9 variant subpopulations and the dominant subpopulation accounted for 80% of the total genomes. In two of the three monkeys, the inoculated wild-type virus was rapidly replaced by new wild type variants. By week 13, the original dominant subpopulation in the inoculum was replaced by new dominant subpopulations, followed by emergence of variants carrying known NNRTI resistance mutations. However, during ART, virus subpopulations containing resistance mutations did not outgrow the wide-type subpopulations until a minor subpopulation carrying linked drug resistance mutations (K103N/M184I) emerged. We observed that persistent viremia during ART is primarily made up of wild type subpopulations. We also found that subpopulations carrying the V75L mutation, not known to be associated with NNRTI resistance, emerged initially in week 13 in two macaques. Eventually, all subpopulations from these two macaques carried the V75L mutation. CONCLUSION: This study quantitatively describes virus evolution and population dynamics patterns in an animal model. The fact that wild type subpopulations remained as dominant subpopulations during ART treatment suggests that the presence or absence of at least some known drug resistant mutations may not greatly affect virus replication capacity in vivo. Additionally, the emergence and prevalence of V75L indicates that this mutation may provide the virus a selective advantage, perhaps escaping the host immure system surveillance. Our new method to quantitatively analyze viral population dynamics enabled us to observe the relative competitiveness and adaption of different viral variants and provided a valuable tool for studying HIV subpopulation emergence, persistence, and decline during ART.
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spelling pubmed-27765782009-11-13 RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy Shao, Wei Kearney, Mary Maldarelli, Frank Mellors, John W Stephens, Robert M Lifson, Jeffrey D KewalRamani, Vineet N Ambrose, Zandrea Coffin, John M Palmer, Sarah E Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: To study the dynamics of wild-type and drug-resistant HIV-1 RT variants, we developed a methodology that follows the fates of individual genomes over time within the viral quasispecies. Single genome sequences were obtained from 3 pigtail macaques infected with a recombinant simian immunodeficiency virus containing the RT coding region from HIV-1 (RT-SHIV) and treated with short-course efavirenz monotherapy 13 weeks post-infection followed by daily combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) beginning at week 17. Bioinformatics tools were constructed to trace individual genomes from the beginning of infection to the end of the treatment. RESULTS: A well characterized challenge RT-SHIV inoculum was used to infect three monkeys. The RT-SHIV inoculum had 9 variant subpopulations and the dominant subpopulation accounted for 80% of the total genomes. In two of the three monkeys, the inoculated wild-type virus was rapidly replaced by new wild type variants. By week 13, the original dominant subpopulation in the inoculum was replaced by new dominant subpopulations, followed by emergence of variants carrying known NNRTI resistance mutations. However, during ART, virus subpopulations containing resistance mutations did not outgrow the wide-type subpopulations until a minor subpopulation carrying linked drug resistance mutations (K103N/M184I) emerged. We observed that persistent viremia during ART is primarily made up of wild type subpopulations. We also found that subpopulations carrying the V75L mutation, not known to be associated with NNRTI resistance, emerged initially in week 13 in two macaques. Eventually, all subpopulations from these two macaques carried the V75L mutation. CONCLUSION: This study quantitatively describes virus evolution and population dynamics patterns in an animal model. The fact that wild type subpopulations remained as dominant subpopulations during ART treatment suggests that the presence or absence of at least some known drug resistant mutations may not greatly affect virus replication capacity in vivo. Additionally, the emergence and prevalence of V75L indicates that this mutation may provide the virus a selective advantage, perhaps escaping the host immure system surveillance. Our new method to quantitatively analyze viral population dynamics enabled us to observe the relative competitiveness and adaption of different viral variants and provided a valuable tool for studying HIV subpopulation emergence, persistence, and decline during ART. BioMed Central 2009-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2776578/ /pubmed/19889213 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-101 Text en Copyright ©2009 Shao 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
Shao, Wei
Kearney, Mary
Maldarelli, Frank
Mellors, John W
Stephens, Robert M
Lifson, Jeffrey D
KewalRamani, Vineet N
Ambrose, Zandrea
Coffin, John M
Palmer, Sarah E
RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title_full RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title_fullStr RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title_full_unstemmed RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title_short RT-SHIV subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-HIV therapy
title_sort rt-shiv subpopulation dynamics in infected macaques during anti-hiv therapy
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2776578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19889213
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-101
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