| Literature DB >> 29304821 |
Axel Fun1, Thomas Leitner2, Linos Vandekerckhove3, Martin Däumer4, Alexander Thielen5, Bernd Buchholz6, Andy I M Hoepelman7, Elizabeth H Gisolf8, Pauline J Schipper1, Annemarie M J Wensing1,7, Monique Nijhuis9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergence of resistance against integrase inhibitor raltegravir in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) patients is generally associated with selection of one of three signature mutations: Y143C/R, Q148K/H/R or N155H, representing three distinct resistance pathways. The mechanisms that drive selection of a specific pathway are still poorly understood. We investigated the impact of the HIV-1 genetic background and population dynamics on the emergence of raltegravir resistance. Using deep sequencing we analyzed the integrase coding sequence (CDS) in longitudinal samples from five patients who initiated raltegravir plus optimized background therapy at viral loads > 5000 copies/ml. To investigate the role of the HIV-1 genetic background we created recombinant viruses containing the viral integrase coding region from pre-raltegravir samples from two patients in whom raltegravir resistance developed through different pathways. The in vitro selections performed with these recombinant viruses were designed to mimic natural population bottlenecks.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29304821 PMCID: PMC5755036 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-017-0384-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1Development of raltegravir resistance during raltegravir containing cART. Left hand panels: therapy history, HIV-1 RNA load, CD4+ cell count and resistance mutations detected by population sequencing of five patients receiving raltegravir therapy. All viral load measurements are marked by a solid black circle. The CD4+ cell counts are represented by open triangles. Samples analyzed by 454 deep sequencing are marked by colored circles. Resistance mutations detected by Sanger population sequencing are indicated in boxes. Only raltegravir resistance associated mutations are given. Right hand panels: evolution of resistance pathways, deep sequence analysis of the integrase core domain. Data was obtained by 454 pyrosequencing. Relevant resistance mutations are indicated at the respective nodes. Figures were generated using the nucleotide sequences and the redundancy-level for calling a variant was set at 80. No mutation information indicates wild-type amino acids. The size of each node is scaled to reflect the relative abundance and viral load at each time point and patient. Time points are indicated by color and correspond to the colored circles in the left hand panels: green is the baseline sample, blue the first sample after raltegravir therapy initiation; red is the second sample after raltegravir therapy initiation; black is the final sample after raltegravir therapy initiation. In patient 3 gold is another baseline sample predating the green sample
Fig. 2Analysis of the longitudinal 454 deep sequencing data. a Analysis of the frequency of all non-synonymous mutations detected by deep sequencing at the 18 codons associated with raltegravir resistance. Only unique variants with a minimum of 10 reads were included in the analysis. Total number of reads and the proportion of reads containing the denoted mutations relative to the total number of reads are given. Mutations of interest are highlighted by colored boxes. Similar colored boxes are mutations that appeared to be on the same genome. Red boxes indicate mutations from the Q148 pathway, yellow boxes indicate the Y143 pathway and green boxes the N155 pathway. b Sequences containing multiple mutations are shown. Double mutants are sorted by frequency
Fig. 3Viral load versus total number of sequences and number of unique variants. Left panels: the normalized (range 0–1) viral load, number of detected sequences and unique number of variants. The correlation coefficient, R, is indicated for the comparisons to the viral load. Right panels: the relative number of derived sequences and the number of unique variants relative to the viral load. Figures were generated using the nucleotide sequences and the redundancy-level for calling a variant was set at 80
Fig. 4Raltegravir in vitro selections with patient-derived integrase recombinant viruses. Raltegravir concentration was doubled in each serial passage to a final concentration of 1024 nM of raltegravir in passage 10. All differences from the HXB2 reference sequence are given and mutations emerging during the raltegravir in vitro selections in the viral integrase coding region are indicated in red. The indicated mutations were detected by population sequencing of viral RNA in the culture supernatants from passage 10. Cultures 3 and 5 from Pt2 were discontinued due to failed virus propagation