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Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences

Significant progress has been made in characterizing broadly neutralizing antibodies against the HIV envelope glycoprotein Env, but an effective vaccine has proven elusive. Vaccine development would be facilitated if common features of early founder virus required for transmission could be identifie...

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Autores principales: Murray, John M., Maher, Stephen, Mota, Talia, Suzuki, Kazuo, Kelleher, Anthony D., Center, Rob J., Purcell, Damian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5302377/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28187204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171572
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author Murray, John M.
Maher, Stephen
Mota, Talia
Suzuki, Kazuo
Kelleher, Anthony D.
Center, Rob J.
Purcell, Damian
author_facet Murray, John M.
Maher, Stephen
Mota, Talia
Suzuki, Kazuo
Kelleher, Anthony D.
Center, Rob J.
Purcell, Damian
author_sort Murray, John M.
collection PubMed
description Significant progress has been made in characterizing broadly neutralizing antibodies against the HIV envelope glycoprotein Env, but an effective vaccine has proven elusive. Vaccine development would be facilitated if common features of early founder virus required for transmission could be identified. Here we employ a combination of bioinformatic and operations research methods to determine the most prevalent features that distinguish 78 subtype B and 55 subtype C founder Env sequences from an equal number of chronic sequences. There were a number of equivalent optimal networks (based on the fewest covarying amino acid (AA) pairs or a measure of maximal covariance) that separated founders from chronics: 13 pairs for subtype B and 75 for subtype C. Every subtype B optimal solution contained the founder pairs 178–346 Asn-Val, 232–236 Thr-Ser, 240–340 Lys-Lys, 279–315 Asp-Lys, 291–792 Ala-Ile, 322–347 Asp-Thr, 535–620 Leu-Asp, 742–837 Arg-Phe, and 750–836 Asp-Ile; the most common optimal pairs for subtype C were 644–781 Lys-Ala (74 of 75 networks), 133–287 Ala-Gln (73/75) and 307–337 Ile-Gln (73/75). No pair was present in all optimal subtype C solutions highlighting the difficulty in targeting transmission with a single vaccine strain. Relative to the size of its domain (0.35% of Env), the α(4)β(7) binding site occurred most frequently among optimal pairs, especially for subtype C: 4.2% of optimal pairs (1.2% for subtype B). Early sequences from 5 subtype B pre-seroconverters each exhibited at least one clone containing an optimal feature 553–624 (Ser-Asn), 724–747 (Arg-Arg), or 46–293 (Arg-Glu).
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spelling pubmed-53023772017-02-28 Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences Murray, John M. Maher, Stephen Mota, Talia Suzuki, Kazuo Kelleher, Anthony D. Center, Rob J. Purcell, Damian PLoS One Research Article Significant progress has been made in characterizing broadly neutralizing antibodies against the HIV envelope glycoprotein Env, but an effective vaccine has proven elusive. Vaccine development would be facilitated if common features of early founder virus required for transmission could be identified. Here we employ a combination of bioinformatic and operations research methods to determine the most prevalent features that distinguish 78 subtype B and 55 subtype C founder Env sequences from an equal number of chronic sequences. There were a number of equivalent optimal networks (based on the fewest covarying amino acid (AA) pairs or a measure of maximal covariance) that separated founders from chronics: 13 pairs for subtype B and 75 for subtype C. Every subtype B optimal solution contained the founder pairs 178–346 Asn-Val, 232–236 Thr-Ser, 240–340 Lys-Lys, 279–315 Asp-Lys, 291–792 Ala-Ile, 322–347 Asp-Thr, 535–620 Leu-Asp, 742–837 Arg-Phe, and 750–836 Asp-Ile; the most common optimal pairs for subtype C were 644–781 Lys-Ala (74 of 75 networks), 133–287 Ala-Gln (73/75) and 307–337 Ile-Gln (73/75). No pair was present in all optimal subtype C solutions highlighting the difficulty in targeting transmission with a single vaccine strain. Relative to the size of its domain (0.35% of Env), the α(4)β(7) binding site occurred most frequently among optimal pairs, especially for subtype C: 4.2% of optimal pairs (1.2% for subtype B). Early sequences from 5 subtype B pre-seroconverters each exhibited at least one clone containing an optimal feature 553–624 (Ser-Asn), 724–747 (Arg-Arg), or 46–293 (Arg-Glu). Public Library of Science 2017-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5302377/ /pubmed/28187204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171572 Text en © 2017 Murray 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Murray, John M.
Maher, Stephen
Mota, Talia
Suzuki, Kazuo
Kelleher, Anthony D.
Center, Rob J.
Purcell, Damian
Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title_full Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title_fullStr Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title_full_unstemmed Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title_short Differentiating founder and chronic HIV envelope sequences
title_sort differentiating founder and chronic hiv envelope sequences
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5302377/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28187204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171572
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