Literature DB >> 19157481

High replication fitness and transmission efficiency of HIV-1 subtype C from India: Implications for subtype C predominance.

Milka A Rodriguez1, Ming Ding, Deena Ratner, Yue Chen, Srikanth P Tripathy, Smita S Kulkarni, Ramdas Chatterjee, Patrick M Tarwater, Phalguni Gupta.   

Abstract

HIV-1 subtype C has been the predominant subtype throughout the course of the HIV-1 epidemic in India regardless of the geographic region of the country. In an effort to understand the mechanism of subtype C predominance in this country, we have investigated the in vitro replication fitness and transmission efficiency of HIV-1 subtypes A and C from India. Using a dual infection growth competition assay, we found that primary HIV-1 subtype C isolates had higher overall relative fitness in PBMC than subtype A primary isolates. Moreover, in an ex vivo cervical tissue derived organ culture, subtype C isolates displayed higher transmission efficiency across cervical mucosa than subtype A isolates. We found that higher fitness of subtype C was not due to a trans effect exerted by subtype C infected PBMC. A half genome A/C recombinant clone in which the 3' half of the viral genome of subtype A was replaced with the corresponding subtype C3' half, had similar replicative fitness as the parental subtype A. These results suggest that the higher replication fitness and transmission efficiency of subtype C virus compared to subtype A virus from India is most probably not due to the envelope gene alone and may be due to genes present within the 5' half of the viral genome or to a more complex interaction between the genes located within the two halves of the viral genome. These data provide a model to explain the asymmetric distribution of subtype C over other subtypes in India.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19157481     DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2008.12.025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Virology        ISSN: 0042-6822            Impact factor:   3.616


  23 in total

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