Literature DB >> 20810731

Early selection in Gag by protective HLA alleles contributes to reduced HIV-1 replication capacity that may be largely compensated for in chronic infection.

Mark A Brockman1, Zabrina L Brumme, Chanson J Brumme, Toshiyuki Miura, Jennifer Sela, Pamela C Rosato, Carl M Kadie, Jonathan M Carlson, Tristan J Markle, Hendrik Streeck, Anthony D Kelleher, Martin Markowitz, Heiko Jessen, Eric Rosenberg, Marcus Altfeld, P Richard Harrigan, David Heckerman, Bruce D Walker, Todd M Allen.   

Abstract

Mutations that allow escape from CD8 T-cell responses are common in HIV-1 and may attenuate pathogenesis by reducing viral fitness. While this has been demonstrated for individual cases, a systematic investigation of the consequence of HLA class I-mediated selection on HIV-1 in vitro replication capacity (RC) has not been undertaken. We examined this question by generating recombinant viruses expressing plasma HIV-1 RNA-derived Gag-Protease sequences from 66 acute/early and 803 chronic untreated subtype B-infected individuals in an NL4-3 background and measuring their RCs using a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter CD4 T-cell assay. In acute/early infection, viruses derived from individuals expressing the protective alleles HLA-B*57, -B*5801, and/or -B*13 displayed significantly lower RCs than did viruses from individuals lacking these alleles (P < 0.05). Furthermore, acute/early RC inversely correlated with the presence of HLA-B-associated Gag polymorphisms (R = -0.27; P = 0.03), suggesting a cumulative effect of primary escape mutations on fitness during the first months of infection. At the chronic stage of infection, no strong correlations were observed between RC and protective HLA-B alleles or with the presence of HLA-B-associated polymorphisms restricted by protective alleles despite increased statistical power to detect these associations. However, RC correlated positively with the presence of known compensatory mutations in chronic viruses from B*57-expressing individuals harboring the Gag T242N mutation (n = 50; R = 0.36; P = 0.01), suggesting that the rescue of fitness defects occurred through mutations at secondary sites. Additional mutations in Gag that may modulate the impact of the T242N mutation on RC were identified. A modest inverse correlation was observed between RC and CD4 cell count in chronic infection (R = -0.17; P < 0.0001), suggesting that Gag-Protease RC could increase over the disease course. Notably, this association was stronger for individuals who expressed B*57, B*58, or B*13 (R = -0.27; P = 0.004). Taken together, these data indicate that certain protective HLA alleles contribute to early defects in HIV-1 fitness through the selection of detrimental mutations in Gag; however, these effects wane as compensatory mutations accumulate in chronic infection. The long-term control of HIV-1 in some persons who express protective alleles suggests that early fitness hits may provide lasting benefits.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20810731      PMCID: PMC2977869          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01086-10

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  66 in total

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2.  Fitness costs limit viral escape from cytotoxic T lymphocytes at a structurally constrained epitope.

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Authors:  Jaclyn K Wright; Zabrina L Brumme; Jonathan M Carlson; David Heckerman; Carl M Kadie; Chanson J Brumme; Bingxia Wang; Elena Losina; Toshiyuki Miura; Fundisiwe Chonco; Mary van der Stok; Zenele Mncube; Karen Bishop; Philip J R Goulder; Bruce D Walker; Mark A Brockman; Thumbi Ndung'u
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2010-08-11       Impact factor: 5.103

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8.  Temporal association of cellular immune responses with the initial control of viremia in primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 syndrome.

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Authors:  Paul A Goepfert; Wendy Lumm; Paul Farmer; Philippa Matthews; Andrew Prendergast; Jonathan M Carlson; Cynthia A Derdeyn; Jianming Tang; Richard A Kaslow; Anju Bansal; Karina Yusim; David Heckerman; Joseph Mulenga; Susan Allen; Philip J R Goulder; Eric Hunter
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2008-04-21       Impact factor: 14.307

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  80 in total

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2.  Lack of association between HLA class II alleles and in vitro replication capacities of recombinant viruses encoding HIV-1 subtype C Gag-protease from chronically infected individuals.

Authors:  Jaclyn K Wright; Zabrina L Brumme; Boris Julg; Mary van der Stok; Zenele Mncube; Xiaojiang Gao; Jonathan M Carlson; Philip J R Goulder; Bruce D Walker; Mark A Brockman; Thumbi Ndung'u
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2011-11-16       Impact factor: 5.103

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Authors:  Mark A Brockman; Denis R Chopera; Alex Olvera; Chanson J Brumme; Jennifer Sela; Tristan J Markle; Eric Martin; Jonathan M Carlson; Anh Q Le; Rachel McGovern; Peter K Cheung; Anthony D Kelleher; Heiko Jessen; Martin Markowitz; Eric Rosenberg; Nicole Frahm; Jorge Sanchez; Simon Mallal; Mina John; P Richard Harrigan; David Heckerman; Christian Brander; Bruce D Walker; Zabrina L Brumme
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4.  Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Bottleneck Selects for Consensus Virus with Lower Gag-Protease-Driven Replication Capacity.

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5.  Influence of Gag-protease-mediated replication capacity on disease progression in individuals recently infected with HIV-1 subtype C.

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Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2011-02-02       Impact factor: 5.103

6.  Replication Capacity of Viruses from Acute Infection Drives HIV-1 Disease Progression.

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8.  Tertiary mutations stabilize CD8+ T lymphocyte escape-associated compensatory mutations following transmission of simian immunodeficiency virus.

Authors:  Benjamin J Burwitz; Helen L Wu; Jason S Reed; Katherine B Hammond; Laura P Newman; Benjamin N Bimber; Francesca A Nimiyongskul; Enrique J Leon; Nicholas J Maness; Thomas C Friedrich; Masaru Yokoyama; Hironori Sato; Tetsuro Matano; David H O'Connor; Jonah B Sacha
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