Literature DB >> 28507544

Within-Epitope Interactions Can Bias CTL Escape Estimation in Early HIV Infection.

Victor Garcia1, Marcus W Feldman1.   

Abstract

As human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) begins to replicate within hosts, immune responses are elicited against it. Escape mutations in viral epitopes-immunogenic peptide parts presented on the surface of infected cells-allow HIV to partially evade these responses, and thus rapidly go to fixation. The faster they go to fixation, i.e., the higher their escape rate, the larger the selective pressure exerted by the immune system is assumed to be. This relation underpins the rationale for using escapes to assess the strength of immune responses. However, escape rate estimates are often obtained by employing an aggregation procedure, where several mutations that affect the same epitope are aggregated into a single, composite epitope mutation. The aggregation procedure thus rests upon the assumption that all within-epitope mutations have indistinguishable effects on immune recognition. In this study, we investigate how violation of this assumption affects escape rate estimates. To this end, we extend a previously developed simulation model of HIV that accounts for mutation, selection, and recombination to include different distributions of fitness effects (DFEs) and inter-mutational genomic distances. We use this discrete time Wright-Fisher based model to simulate early within-host evolution of HIV for DFEs and apply standard estimation methods to infer the escape rates. We then compare true with estimated escape rate values. We also compare escape rate values obtained by applying the aggregation procedure with values estimated without use of that procedure. We find that across the DFEs analyzed, the aggregation procedure alters the detectability of escape mutations: large-effect mutations are overrepresented while small-effect mutations are concealed. The effect of the aggregation procedure is similar to extracting the largest-effect mutation appearing within an epitope. Furthermore, the more pronounced the over-exponential decay of the DFEs, the more severely true escape rates are underestimated. We conclude that the aggregation procedure has two main consequences. On the one hand, it leads to a misrepresentation of the DFE of fixed mutations. On the other hand, it conceals within-epitope interactions that may generate irregularities in mutation frequency trajectories that are thus left unexplained.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL); escape; genetic interference; human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); population genetics

Year:  2017        PMID: 28507544      PMCID: PMC5410659          DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00423

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Immunol        ISSN: 1664-3224            Impact factor:   7.561


  52 in total

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3.  Epitope-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes cross-recognize mutant simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) sequences but fail to contain very early evolution and eventual fixation of epitope escape mutations during SIV infection.

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4.  Lower in vivo mutation rate of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 than that predicted from the fidelity of purified reverse transcriptase.

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6.  Mathematical modeling of escape of HIV from cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses.

Authors:  Vitaly V Ganusov; Richard A Neher; Alan S Perelson
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7.  The role of recombination for the coevolutionary dynamics of HIV and the immune response.

Authors:  Rafal Mostowy; Roger D Kouyos; David Fouchet; Sebastian Bonhoeffer
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8.  Genetic identity, biological phenotype, and evolutionary pathways of transmitted/founder viruses in acute and early HIV-1 infection.

Authors:  Jesus F Salazar-Gonzalez; Maria G Salazar; Brandon F Keele; Gerald H Learn; Elena E Giorgi; Hui Li; Julie M Decker; Shuyi Wang; Joshua Baalwa; Matthias H Kraus; Nicholas F Parrish; Katharina S Shaw; M Brad Guffey; Katharine J Bar; Katie L Davis; Christina Ochsenbauer-Jambor; John C Kappes; Michael S Saag; Myron S Cohen; Joseph Mulenga; Cynthia A Derdeyn; Susan Allen; Eric Hunter; Martin Markowitz; Peter Hraber; Alan S Perelson; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; Barton F Haynes; Bette T Korber; Beatrice H Hahn; George M Shaw
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2009-06-01       Impact factor: 14.307

9.  Dynamics of immune escape during HIV/SIV infection.

Authors:  Christian L Althaus; Rob J De Boer
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2008-07-18       Impact factor: 4.475

10.  Broad CTL Response in Early HIV Infection Drives Multiple Concurrent CTL Escapes.

Authors:  Sivan Leviyang; Vitaly V Ganusov
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2015-10-27       Impact factor: 4.475

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  1 in total

1.  Clonal interference can cause wavelet-like oscillations of multilocus linkage disequilibrium.

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  1 in total

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