| Literature DB >> 10225224 |
J C Plantier1, F Damond, M Lasky, J L Sankalé, C Apetrei, M Peeters, L Buzelay, S M'Boup, P Kanki, E Delaporte, F Simon, F Barin.
Abstract
HIV-1 V3 serotyping is a classification of immunodeficiency viruses based on antibody binding to V3 peptides that allows obtaining information on circulating subtypes that could be important for population-based epidemiologic studies. Recently, several laboratories have developed V3 enzyme-immunoassays (EIAs) using V3 peptides of subtypes A to E. In the present study, the utility of including additional peptides of subtypes F to H to the EIA was evaluated on a panel of 203 well-characterized serum samples from patients with diverse geographic origins (22 countries) and known HIV-1 genotype (79 A, 61 B, 21 C, 7 D, 7 E, 21 F, 6 G, 1 H). The results indicate a high predictive value (ppv) for serotypes B (> or =0.86), D (1) and E (0.88), and confirm the difficulty of predicting genotype A or C based on serotype A or C. Results also indicate that inclusion of the F peptide in the V3 EIAs may be useful (ppv = 0.61), but introduction of peptides G and H failed to demonstrate significant sensitivity or specificity for these subtypes. Correlation between serotyping and amino-acid sequences of the V3 region from 103 samples allowed the identification of key amino-acids that appear essential for subtype-specific seroreactivity.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10225224 DOI: 10.1097/00042560-199904150-00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Hum Retrovirol ISSN: 1077-9450