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The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

HIV significantly affects the immunological environment during tuberculosis coinfection, and therefore may influence the selective landscape upon which M. tuberculosis evolves. To test this hypothesis whole genome sequences were determined for 169 South African M. tuberculosis strains from HIV-1 coi...

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Autores principales: Koch, Anastasia S., Brites, Daniela, Stucki, David, Evans, Joanna C., Seldon, Ronnett, Heekes, Alexa, Mulder, Nicola, Nicol, Mark, Oni, Tolu, Mizrahi, Valerie, Warner, Digby F., Parkhill, Julian, Gagneux, Sebastien, Martin, Darren P., Wilkinson, Robert J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5455964/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28369607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msx107
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author Koch, Anastasia S.
Brites, Daniela
Stucki, David
Evans, Joanna C.
Seldon, Ronnett
Heekes, Alexa
Mulder, Nicola
Nicol, Mark
Oni, Tolu
Mizrahi, Valerie
Warner, Digby F.
Parkhill, Julian
Gagneux, Sebastien
Martin, Darren P.
Wilkinson, Robert J.
author_facet Koch, Anastasia S.
Brites, Daniela
Stucki, David
Evans, Joanna C.
Seldon, Ronnett
Heekes, Alexa
Mulder, Nicola
Nicol, Mark
Oni, Tolu
Mizrahi, Valerie
Warner, Digby F.
Parkhill, Julian
Gagneux, Sebastien
Martin, Darren P.
Wilkinson, Robert J.
author_sort Koch, Anastasia S.
collection PubMed
description HIV significantly affects the immunological environment during tuberculosis coinfection, and therefore may influence the selective landscape upon which M. tuberculosis evolves. To test this hypothesis whole genome sequences were determined for 169 South African M. tuberculosis strains from HIV-1 coinfected and uninfected individuals and analyzed using two Bayesian codon-model based selection analysis approaches: FUBAR which was used to detect persistent positive and negative selection (selection respectively favoring and disfavoring nonsynonymous substitutions); and MEDS which was used to detect episodic directional selection specifically favoring nonsynonymous substitutions within HIV-1 infected individuals. Among the 25,251 polymorphic codon sites analyzed, FUBAR revealed that 189-fold more were detectably evolving under persistent negative selection than were evolving under persistent positive selection. Three specific codon sites within the genes celA2b, katG, and cyp138 were identified by MEDS as displaying significant evidence of evolving under directional selection influenced by HIV-1 coinfection. All three genes encode proteins that may indirectly interact with human proteins that, in turn, interact functionally with HIV proteins. Unexpectedly, epitope encoding regions were enriched for sites displaying weak evidence of directional selection influenced by HIV-1. Although the low degree of genetic diversity observed in our M. tuberculosis data set means that these results should be interpreted carefully, the effects of HIV-1 on epitope evolution in M. tuberculosis may have implications for the design of M. tuberculosis vaccines that are intended for use in populations with high HIV-1 infection rates.
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spelling pubmed-54559642017-06-05 The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Koch, Anastasia S. Brites, Daniela Stucki, David Evans, Joanna C. Seldon, Ronnett Heekes, Alexa Mulder, Nicola Nicol, Mark Oni, Tolu Mizrahi, Valerie Warner, Digby F. Parkhill, Julian Gagneux, Sebastien Martin, Darren P. Wilkinson, Robert J. Mol Biol Evol Discoveries HIV significantly affects the immunological environment during tuberculosis coinfection, and therefore may influence the selective landscape upon which M. tuberculosis evolves. To test this hypothesis whole genome sequences were determined for 169 South African M. tuberculosis strains from HIV-1 coinfected and uninfected individuals and analyzed using two Bayesian codon-model based selection analysis approaches: FUBAR which was used to detect persistent positive and negative selection (selection respectively favoring and disfavoring nonsynonymous substitutions); and MEDS which was used to detect episodic directional selection specifically favoring nonsynonymous substitutions within HIV-1 infected individuals. Among the 25,251 polymorphic codon sites analyzed, FUBAR revealed that 189-fold more were detectably evolving under persistent negative selection than were evolving under persistent positive selection. Three specific codon sites within the genes celA2b, katG, and cyp138 were identified by MEDS as displaying significant evidence of evolving under directional selection influenced by HIV-1 coinfection. All three genes encode proteins that may indirectly interact with human proteins that, in turn, interact functionally with HIV proteins. Unexpectedly, epitope encoding regions were enriched for sites displaying weak evidence of directional selection influenced by HIV-1. Although the low degree of genetic diversity observed in our M. tuberculosis data set means that these results should be interpreted carefully, the effects of HIV-1 on epitope evolution in M. tuberculosis may have implications for the design of M. tuberculosis vaccines that are intended for use in populations with high HIV-1 infection rates. Oxford University Press 2017-07 2017-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5455964/ /pubmed/28369607 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msx107 Text en © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. 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 reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Discoveries
Koch, Anastasia S.
Brites, Daniela
Stucki, David
Evans, Joanna C.
Seldon, Ronnett
Heekes, Alexa
Mulder, Nicola
Nicol, Mark
Oni, Tolu
Mizrahi, Valerie
Warner, Digby F.
Parkhill, Julian
Gagneux, Sebastien
Martin, Darren P.
Wilkinson, Robert J.
The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_full The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_fullStr The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_short The Influence of HIV on the Evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_sort influence of hiv on the evolution of mycobacterium tuberculosis
topic Discoveries
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5455964/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28369607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msx107
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