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Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda

Recombination is an important feature of HIV evolution, occurring both within and between the major branches of diversity (subtypes). The Ugandan epidemic is primarily composed of two subtypes, A1 and D, that have been co-circulating for 50 years, frequently recombining in dually infected patients....

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Autores principales: Grant, Heather E, Hodcroft, Emma B, Ssemwanga, Deogratius, Kitayimbwa, John M, Yebra, Gonzalo, Esquivel Gomez, Luis Roger, Frampton, Dan, Gall, Astrid, Kellam, Paul, de Oliveira, Tulio, Bbosa, Nicholas, Nsubuga, Rebecca N, Kibengo, Freddie, Kwan, Tsz Ho, Lycett, Samantha, Kao, Rowland, Robertson, David L, Ratmann, Oliver, Fraser, Christophe, Pillay, Deenan, Kaleebu, Pontiano, Leigh Brown, Andrew J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7204518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32395255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ve/veaa004
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author Grant, Heather E
Hodcroft, Emma B
Ssemwanga, Deogratius
Kitayimbwa, John M
Yebra, Gonzalo
Esquivel Gomez, Luis Roger
Frampton, Dan
Gall, Astrid
Kellam, Paul
de Oliveira, Tulio
Bbosa, Nicholas
Nsubuga, Rebecca N
Kibengo, Freddie
Kwan, Tsz Ho
Lycett, Samantha
Kao, Rowland
Robertson, David L
Ratmann, Oliver
Fraser, Christophe
Pillay, Deenan
Kaleebu, Pontiano
Leigh Brown, Andrew J
author_facet Grant, Heather E
Hodcroft, Emma B
Ssemwanga, Deogratius
Kitayimbwa, John M
Yebra, Gonzalo
Esquivel Gomez, Luis Roger
Frampton, Dan
Gall, Astrid
Kellam, Paul
de Oliveira, Tulio
Bbosa, Nicholas
Nsubuga, Rebecca N
Kibengo, Freddie
Kwan, Tsz Ho
Lycett, Samantha
Kao, Rowland
Robertson, David L
Ratmann, Oliver
Fraser, Christophe
Pillay, Deenan
Kaleebu, Pontiano
Leigh Brown, Andrew J
author_sort Grant, Heather E
collection PubMed
description Recombination is an important feature of HIV evolution, occurring both within and between the major branches of diversity (subtypes). The Ugandan epidemic is primarily composed of two subtypes, A1 and D, that have been co-circulating for 50 years, frequently recombining in dually infected patients. Here, we investigate the frequency of recombinants in this population and the location of breakpoints along the genome. As part of the PANGEA-HIV consortium, 1,472 consensus genome sequences over 5 kb have been obtained from 1,857 samples collected by the MRC/UVRI & LSHTM Research unit in Uganda, 465 (31.6 per cent) of which were near full-length sequences (>8 kb). Using the subtyping tool SCUEAL, we find that of the near full-length dataset, 233 (50.1 per cent) genomes contained only one subtype, 30.8 per cent A1 (n = 143), 17.6 per cent D (n = 82), and 1.7 per cent C (n = 8), while 49.9 per cent (n = 232) contained more than one subtype (including A1/D (n = 164), A1/C (n = 13), C/D (n = 9); A1/C/D (n = 13), and 33 complex types). K-means clustering of the recombinant A1/D genomes revealed a section of envelope (C2gp120-TMgp41) is often inherited intact, whilst a generalized linear model was used to demonstrate significantly fewer breakpoints in the gag–pol and envelope C2-TM regions compared with accessory gene regions. Despite similar recombination patterns in many recombinants, no clearly supported circulating recombinant form (CRF) was found, there was limited evidence of the transmission of breakpoints, and the vast majority (153/164; 93 per cent) of the A1/D recombinants appear to be unique recombinant forms. Thus, recombination is pervasive with clear biases in breakpoint location, but CRFs are not a significant feature, characteristic of a complex, and diverse epidemic.
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spelling pubmed-72045182020-05-11 Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda Grant, Heather E Hodcroft, Emma B Ssemwanga, Deogratius Kitayimbwa, John M Yebra, Gonzalo Esquivel Gomez, Luis Roger Frampton, Dan Gall, Astrid Kellam, Paul de Oliveira, Tulio Bbosa, Nicholas Nsubuga, Rebecca N Kibengo, Freddie Kwan, Tsz Ho Lycett, Samantha Kao, Rowland Robertson, David L Ratmann, Oliver Fraser, Christophe Pillay, Deenan Kaleebu, Pontiano Leigh Brown, Andrew J Virus Evol Research Article Recombination is an important feature of HIV evolution, occurring both within and between the major branches of diversity (subtypes). The Ugandan epidemic is primarily composed of two subtypes, A1 and D, that have been co-circulating for 50 years, frequently recombining in dually infected patients. Here, we investigate the frequency of recombinants in this population and the location of breakpoints along the genome. As part of the PANGEA-HIV consortium, 1,472 consensus genome sequences over 5 kb have been obtained from 1,857 samples collected by the MRC/UVRI & LSHTM Research unit in Uganda, 465 (31.6 per cent) of which were near full-length sequences (>8 kb). Using the subtyping tool SCUEAL, we find that of the near full-length dataset, 233 (50.1 per cent) genomes contained only one subtype, 30.8 per cent A1 (n = 143), 17.6 per cent D (n = 82), and 1.7 per cent C (n = 8), while 49.9 per cent (n = 232) contained more than one subtype (including A1/D (n = 164), A1/C (n = 13), C/D (n = 9); A1/C/D (n = 13), and 33 complex types). K-means clustering of the recombinant A1/D genomes revealed a section of envelope (C2gp120-TMgp41) is often inherited intact, whilst a generalized linear model was used to demonstrate significantly fewer breakpoints in the gag–pol and envelope C2-TM regions compared with accessory gene regions. Despite similar recombination patterns in many recombinants, no clearly supported circulating recombinant form (CRF) was found, there was limited evidence of the transmission of breakpoints, and the vast majority (153/164; 93 per cent) of the A1/D recombinants appear to be unique recombinant forms. Thus, recombination is pervasive with clear biases in breakpoint location, but CRFs are not a significant feature, characteristic of a complex, and diverse epidemic. Oxford University Press 2020-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7204518/ /pubmed/32395255 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ve/veaa004 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. 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 Research Article
Grant, Heather E
Hodcroft, Emma B
Ssemwanga, Deogratius
Kitayimbwa, John M
Yebra, Gonzalo
Esquivel Gomez, Luis Roger
Frampton, Dan
Gall, Astrid
Kellam, Paul
de Oliveira, Tulio
Bbosa, Nicholas
Nsubuga, Rebecca N
Kibengo, Freddie
Kwan, Tsz Ho
Lycett, Samantha
Kao, Rowland
Robertson, David L
Ratmann, Oliver
Fraser, Christophe
Pillay, Deenan
Kaleebu, Pontiano
Leigh Brown, Andrew J
Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title_full Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title_fullStr Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title_short Pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length HIV genomes from Uganda
title_sort pervasive and non-random recombination in near full-length hiv genomes from uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7204518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32395255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ve/veaa004
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