| Literature DB >> 17958917 |
Haran Sivakumaran1, Bin Wang, M John Gill, Brenda Beckholdt, Nitin K Saksena, David Harrich.
Abstract
Here we investigated the nature and functional consequences of mutations in the HIV-1 tat gene within an epidemiologically-linked AIDS transmission cohort consisting of a non-progressing donor (A) and two normal progressing recipients (B and C). Multiple nonsynonymous mutations in the tat first exon were observed across time in all individuals. Some mutations demonstrated striking host specificity despite the cohort being infected with a common virus. Phylogenetic segregation of the tat clones at the time of progression to AIDS was also observed especially in recipient C. Tat clones supporting high levels of transactivation were present at all time points in all individuals, although a number of clones defective for transactivation were observed for recipient C in later time points. Here we show that the tat quasispecies in a linked transmission cohort diversify and evolve independently between hosts following transmission. It supports the belief that quasispecies variation in HIV-1 is a mechanism for selection towards defining a fitter gene variant that is capable of resisting the human immune system.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17958917 PMCID: PMC2174444 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-4-107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Amino acid alignment of cohort Tat clones. The sequenced cohort Tat clones are aligned against clone A1-1. A dot represents amino acid identity at that position; an asterisk represents a stop codon. Tat domains as described by [19] are separated by vertical lines, individual-specific substitutions are indicated by solid boxes and substitutions common to recipients B and C by dashed boxes. The amino acid sequence of one-exon Tat from HIV-1 clone SF2 is shown for comparison. The nucleotide sequences of these clones are available from GenBank ([GenBank:EU184659] – [GenBank:EU184684]).
Figure 2Phylogenetic analysis. Neighbour-joining phylogenetic reconstruction of tat clones based on nucleotide (A) and peptide (B) sequences. The differences in the tree topologies suggest nonsynonymous evolution of tat in each host. Donor A's clone A1-1 is underlined in both cladograms.
Figure 3Composition, variation, and activity of the cohort's . (A) Multiple one-exon tat clones from donor A, recipient B and recipient C were sequenced and their amino acid sequences were compared at each time point (represented as columns). Identical amino acid sequences were classed together as clones and are represented above as boxes within the columns. The numbers within the columns indicate the total number of tat clones successfully sequenced for each time point. See Figure 1 for the clones' amino acid sequences. (B) Relative transactivation abilities of the cohort tat clones. Columns are transactivated luciferase output normalised against constitutive β-galactosidase output and expressed relative to a positive control for transactivation (the SF2 clone of one-exon tat). The values at the bases of the columns indicate the number of times that particular Tat amino acid sequence was scored in the entire sample set. An asterisk indicates p < 0.01 for the null hypothesis compared to clone A1-1. Results are means and standard deviations of three independent experiments.