| Literature DB >> 26382239 |
Katherine A Sutherland1, Chris M Parry2, Adele McCormick1, Anne Kapaata2, Fred Lyagoba2, Pontiano Kaleebu2, Charles F Gilks3, Ruth Goodall4, Moira Spyer4, Cissy Kityo5, Deenan Pillay6, Ravindra K Gupta1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Major protease mutations are rarely observed following failure with protease inhibitors (PI), and other viral determinants of failure to PI are poorly understood. We therefore characterized Gag-Protease phenotypic susceptibility in subtype A and D viruses circulating in East Africa following viral rebound on PIs.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26382239 PMCID: PMC4575205 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Viral load and patient treatment information.
Treatment history of each patient is shown, from switch to second-line therapy during the DART trial (week -24, BL) and their enrollment in SARA (week 0), shown for most patients by simplification to LPV/r monotherapy. All patients were randomised to the LPV/r monotherapy arm of the SARA trial except for patients 1 and 7, who were randomised to continue on LPV/r containing triple therapy (CT). Available viral load measurements are shown; these were performed retrospectively and did not inform treatment decisions. The limit of detection for the assay (<50 copies/mL) is denoted with a red dashed line. The time from which the pre-PI (baseline, BL) and failure (Fail) samples included in this study were derived is highlighted by grey bars. For patient 7, the pre-PI sample was derived from week 0 of the DART trial before the week -24 of SARA timepoint, hence is not shown on this graph.
Amino acid changes in Gag-protease at time of treatment failure relative to pre-PI Gag-Protease sequence in study participants.
| Mutations at Treatment Failure, not present at the Pre-PI Timepoint | ||
|---|---|---|
| Patient | Gag | Protease |
| 1 | R26K, G387S | - |
| 2 | L46I, R91G, A95K, T109A, S111F, N124S, S239T, R268K | V13I |
| 3 | V34I | I77V |
| 4 | L34I, A37P, D42E, Q59M, K69R, L90E, T122A, N389I, Q468E, V469I, P473S, T487A | I13V, V72I |
| 5 | K26R, R30Q, E62A, T72S, Y79F, A81T, V82T, H89Q, R91Q, I94V, N124S, K127T, T138A, M142W, T144H, V147L, V215I, S252G, T332S, K335R, T339A, R406K, A431V | I54V |
| 6 | V7I, G49D, R69Q, A120D, Q127K, N375S, I462S | - |
| 7 | S38G, A67T, N127K, K361R, P473A | - |
*I54V and I84V were not present in the same viral clone, but were present on separate clones. A431V developed only in the clones with I54V. ‘-‘) denotes when no changes in protease were present at failure.
Fig 2PI susceptibility and single round infectivity of patient Gag-Protease derived pre-PI therapy and at the time of treatment failure.
Full-length Gag-Protease from pre-PI therapy and failure time-points was amplified or synthesised, and cloned into our Gag-Pol expression vector p8.9NSX+. PI susceptibility of VSV-g pseudotyped viruses from patients experiencing virological failure in the absence of major resistance mutations was measured in a cell-based, single-round, phenotypic assay to the PIs A) Lopinavir (LPV) and B) Darunavir (DRV). The patient numbers are shown for each data point and data are means of two independent repeats. Our data demonstrate no significant difference in susceptibility between pre-PI therapy and failure viruses to the PIs LPV (t test, p = 0.91) and DRV (t test, p = 0.78), in patients failing in the absence of major resistance mutations. (C) Single-round infectivity of viruses was measured in the absence of drug in HEK 293T cells and compared in patients failing without major resistance mutations. No significant decrease in single-round infectivity was present (t test, p = 0.07).
Fig 3PI susceptibilities of pre-PI and failure virus from two patients demonstrate changes in phenotypic susceptibility over time.
Full-length Gag-Protease sequences from pre-PI therapy and failure time-points was amplified or synthesised, and single round phenotypic susceptibility testing performed. PIs tested were Lopinavir (LPV) and Darunavir (DRV). (A) Susceptibility data from patient 5 demonstrates the reduction in susceptibility conferred by major mutations I84V (black) and I54V (grey) in our system in comparison with the patient virus at pre-PI therapy (white). Error bars represent standard deviation of two independent experimental repeats. (B) Virus derived pre-PI therapy (white bar) and at time of failure (black bar) from patient 6 demonstrated a difference in susceptibility to LPV in the absence of the development of major resistance mutations.
Fig 4Maximum Likelihood phylogeny of virus from pre-PI therapy and treatment failure timepoints.
Phylogenetic reconstruction was performed using the GTR model of nucleotide substitution. Phylogeny for the three patients for whom multiple sequences from both baseline and failure timepoints is shown: (a) patient 1, (b) patient 5 and (c) patient 3. Pre-PI virus sequences are denoted with circles and failure virus sequences with triangles. For patient 5 the drug resistance positions Gag 431 and Protease 54 and 84 were stripped from the alignment before phylogenetic re-construction. Nodes separating pre-PI and failure variants that supported by >75% bootstrapping are depicted with an asterisk (*).