| Literature DB >> 25243334 |
Martin J Deymier1, Daniel T Claiborne2, Zachary Ende3, Hannah K Ratner4, William Kilembe5, Susan Allen6, Eric Hunter7.
Abstract
The high genetic diversity of HIV-1 impedes high throughput, large-scale sequencing and full-length genome cloning by common restriction enzyme based methods. Applying novel methods that employ a high-fidelity polymerase for amplification and an unbiased fusion-based cloning strategy, we have generated several HIV-1 full-length genome infectious molecular clones from an epidemiologically linked transmission pair. These clones represent the transmitted/founder virus and phylogenetically diverse non-transmitted variants from the chronically infected individual׳s diverse quasispecies near the time of transmission. We demonstrate that, using this approach, PCR-induced mutations in full-length clones derived from their cognate single genome amplicons are rare. Furthermore, all eight non-transmitted genomes tested produced functional virus with a range of infectivities, belying the previous assumption that a majority of circulating viruses in chronic HIV-1 infection are defective. Thus, these methods provide important tools to update protocols in molecular biology that can be universally applied to the study of human viral pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: Amplification; Cloning; Fitness; HIV-1; Infectious molecular clones; Quasispecies; RNA virus; Transmission
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25243334 PMCID: PMC4252503 DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2014.08.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virology ISSN: 0042-6822 Impact factor: 3.616