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Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals

INTRODUCTION: Human APOBEC3G/F (hA3G/F) restricts retroviral replication through G-to-A hypermutations, which can generate drug-resistant progenies in vitro. The clinical relevance is still inconclusive. To bridge this gap, we aim to study the role of these hypermutations in evolution of drug resist...

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Autores principales: Neogi, Ujjwal, Shet, Anita, Sahoo, Pravat Nalini, Bontell, Irene, Ekstrand, Maria L, Banerjea, Akhil C, Sonnerborg, Anders
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3582697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23443042
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.1.18472
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author Neogi, Ujjwal
Shet, Anita
Sahoo, Pravat Nalini
Bontell, Irene
Ekstrand, Maria L
Banerjea, Akhil C
Sonnerborg, Anders
author_facet Neogi, Ujjwal
Shet, Anita
Sahoo, Pravat Nalini
Bontell, Irene
Ekstrand, Maria L
Banerjea, Akhil C
Sonnerborg, Anders
author_sort Neogi, Ujjwal
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Human APOBEC3G/F (hA3G/F) restricts retroviral replication through G-to-A hypermutations, which can generate drug-resistant progenies in vitro. The clinical relevance is still inconclusive. To bridge this gap, we aim to study the role of these hypermutations in evolution of drug resistance; we characterised hA3G/F-mediated hypermutations in the RT region of the pol gene of patients with or without antiretroviral therapy (ART). METHODS: In 88 HIV-1-positive individuals, drug resistance genotyping was carried out in plasma virus and provirus by population sequencing. Hypermutations were determined by three different approaches using Hypermut 2.0 software, cluster analysis and APOBEC3G-mediated defectives indices. Clinical and demographic characteristics of these individuals were studied in relation to these hypermutations. RESULTS: hA3G/F-mediated hypermutated sequences in proviral DNA, but not in plasma virus, were identified in 11.4% (10/88) subjects. Proviral hypermutations were observed more frequently in patients with ART failure than in ART-naïve individuals (p=0.03). In therapy failure patients, proviral hypermutation were associated with greater intra-compartmental genetic diversity (p<0.001). In therapy-naïve individuals, hypermutated proviral DNA with M184I and M230I mutations due to the editing of hA3G, had stop codons in the open reading frames and the same mutations were absent in the plasma virus. Only a limited concordance was found between the drug resistance mutations in plasma RNA and proviral DNA. CONCLUSIONS: hA3G lethal hypermutation was significantly associated with ART failure in Indian HIV-1 subtype C patients. It is unlikely that viral variants, which exhibit hypermutated sequences and M184I and/or M230I, will mature and expand in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-35826972013-02-27 Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals Neogi, Ujjwal Shet, Anita Sahoo, Pravat Nalini Bontell, Irene Ekstrand, Maria L Banerjea, Akhil C Sonnerborg, Anders J Int AIDS Soc Research Article INTRODUCTION: Human APOBEC3G/F (hA3G/F) restricts retroviral replication through G-to-A hypermutations, which can generate drug-resistant progenies in vitro. The clinical relevance is still inconclusive. To bridge this gap, we aim to study the role of these hypermutations in evolution of drug resistance; we characterised hA3G/F-mediated hypermutations in the RT region of the pol gene of patients with or without antiretroviral therapy (ART). METHODS: In 88 HIV-1-positive individuals, drug resistance genotyping was carried out in plasma virus and provirus by population sequencing. Hypermutations were determined by three different approaches using Hypermut 2.0 software, cluster analysis and APOBEC3G-mediated defectives indices. Clinical and demographic characteristics of these individuals were studied in relation to these hypermutations. RESULTS: hA3G/F-mediated hypermutated sequences in proviral DNA, but not in plasma virus, were identified in 11.4% (10/88) subjects. Proviral hypermutations were observed more frequently in patients with ART failure than in ART-naïve individuals (p=0.03). In therapy failure patients, proviral hypermutation were associated with greater intra-compartmental genetic diversity (p<0.001). In therapy-naïve individuals, hypermutated proviral DNA with M184I and M230I mutations due to the editing of hA3G, had stop codons in the open reading frames and the same mutations were absent in the plasma virus. Only a limited concordance was found between the drug resistance mutations in plasma RNA and proviral DNA. CONCLUSIONS: hA3G lethal hypermutation was significantly associated with ART failure in Indian HIV-1 subtype C patients. It is unlikely that viral variants, which exhibit hypermutated sequences and M184I and/or M230I, will mature and expand in vivo. International AIDS Society 2013-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3582697/ /pubmed/23443042 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.1.18472 Text en © 2013 Neogi U et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Neogi, Ujjwal
Shet, Anita
Sahoo, Pravat Nalini
Bontell, Irene
Ekstrand, Maria L
Banerjea, Akhil C
Sonnerborg, Anders
Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title_full Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title_fullStr Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title_full_unstemmed Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title_short Human APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals
title_sort human apobec3g-mediated hypermutation is associated with antiretroviral therapy failure in hiv-1 subtype c-infected individuals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3582697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23443042
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.1.18472
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