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Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) variants that confer resistance to direct-acting-antiviral agents (DAA) have been detected by standard sequencing technology in genotype (G) 1 viruses from DAA-naive patients. It has recently been shown that virological response rates are higher and...

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Autores principales: Margeridon-Thermet, Severine, Le Pogam, Sophie, Li, Lewyn, Liu, Tommy F., Shulman, Nancy, Shafer, Robert W., Najera, Isabel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4139363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25140696
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105569
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author Margeridon-Thermet, Severine
Le Pogam, Sophie
Li, Lewyn
Liu, Tommy F.
Shulman, Nancy
Shafer, Robert W.
Najera, Isabel
author_facet Margeridon-Thermet, Severine
Le Pogam, Sophie
Li, Lewyn
Liu, Tommy F.
Shulman, Nancy
Shafer, Robert W.
Najera, Isabel
author_sort Margeridon-Thermet, Severine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) variants that confer resistance to direct-acting-antiviral agents (DAA) have been detected by standard sequencing technology in genotype (G) 1 viruses from DAA-naive patients. It has recently been shown that virological response rates are higher and breakthrough rates are lower in G1b infected patients than in G1a infected patients treated with certain classes of HCV DAAs. It is not known whether this corresponds to a difference in the composition of G1a and G1b HCV quasispecies in regards to the proportion of naturally occurring DAA-resistant variants before treatment. METHODS: We used ultradeep pyrosequencing to determine the prevalence of low-abundance (<25% of the sequence reads) DAA-resistant variants in 191 NS3 and 116 NS5B isolates from 208 DAA-naive G1-infected patients. RESULTS: A total of 3.5 million high-quality reads of ≥200 nucleotides were generated. The median coverage depth was 4150x and 4470x per NS3 and NS5B amplicon, respectively. Both G1a and G1b populations showed Shannon entropy distributions, with no difference between G1a and G1b in NS3 or NS5B region at the nucleotide level. A higher number of substitutions that confer resistance to protease inhibitors were observed in G1a isolates (mainly at amino acid 80 of the NS3 region). The prevalence of amino acid substitutions that confer resistance to NS5B non-nucleoside inhibitors was similar in G1a and G1b isolates. The NS5B S282T variant, which confers resistance to the polymerase inhibitors mericitabine and sofosbuvir, was not detected in any sample. CONCLUSION: The quasispecies genetic diversity and prevalence of DAA-resistant variants was similar in G1a and G1b isolates and in both NS3 and NS5B regions, suggesting that this is not a determinant for the higher level of DAA resistance observed across G1a HCV infected patients upon treatment.
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spelling pubmed-41393632014-08-25 Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing Margeridon-Thermet, Severine Le Pogam, Sophie Li, Lewyn Liu, Tommy F. Shulman, Nancy Shafer, Robert W. Najera, Isabel PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) variants that confer resistance to direct-acting-antiviral agents (DAA) have been detected by standard sequencing technology in genotype (G) 1 viruses from DAA-naive patients. It has recently been shown that virological response rates are higher and breakthrough rates are lower in G1b infected patients than in G1a infected patients treated with certain classes of HCV DAAs. It is not known whether this corresponds to a difference in the composition of G1a and G1b HCV quasispecies in regards to the proportion of naturally occurring DAA-resistant variants before treatment. METHODS: We used ultradeep pyrosequencing to determine the prevalence of low-abundance (<25% of the sequence reads) DAA-resistant variants in 191 NS3 and 116 NS5B isolates from 208 DAA-naive G1-infected patients. RESULTS: A total of 3.5 million high-quality reads of ≥200 nucleotides were generated. The median coverage depth was 4150x and 4470x per NS3 and NS5B amplicon, respectively. Both G1a and G1b populations showed Shannon entropy distributions, with no difference between G1a and G1b in NS3 or NS5B region at the nucleotide level. A higher number of substitutions that confer resistance to protease inhibitors were observed in G1a isolates (mainly at amino acid 80 of the NS3 region). The prevalence of amino acid substitutions that confer resistance to NS5B non-nucleoside inhibitors was similar in G1a and G1b isolates. The NS5B S282T variant, which confers resistance to the polymerase inhibitors mericitabine and sofosbuvir, was not detected in any sample. CONCLUSION: The quasispecies genetic diversity and prevalence of DAA-resistant variants was similar in G1a and G1b isolates and in both NS3 and NS5B regions, suggesting that this is not a determinant for the higher level of DAA resistance observed across G1a HCV infected patients upon treatment. Public Library of Science 2014-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4139363/ /pubmed/25140696 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105569 Text en © 2014 Margeridon-Thermet et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Margeridon-Thermet, Severine
Le Pogam, Sophie
Li, Lewyn
Liu, Tommy F.
Shulman, Nancy
Shafer, Robert W.
Najera, Isabel
Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title_full Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title_fullStr Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title_full_unstemmed Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title_short Similar Prevalence of Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant Variants in Treatment-Naive Patients with Genotype 1a and 1b Hepatitis C Virus Infections as Determined by Ultradeep Pyrosequencing
title_sort similar prevalence of low-abundance drug-resistant variants in treatment-naive patients with genotype 1a and 1b hepatitis c virus infections as determined by ultradeep pyrosequencing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4139363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25140696
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105569
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