Intra-host dynamics and co-receptor usage of HIV-1 quasi-species in vertically infected patients with phenotypic switch

HIV-1 infection through vertical transmission provides a good model to evaluate intra-host viral evolution and allows to gain insight into the dynamics of viral populations. Our aim was to assess the diversity and dynamics of X4- and R5-using HIV-1 variants in vertically infected children who presen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Infection, genetics and evolution genetics and evolution, 2020-03, Vol.78, p.104066-104066, Article 104066
Hauptverfasser: Fernández, M.F., Distefano, M., Mangano, A., Sen, L., Aulicino, P.C.
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container_title Infection, genetics and evolution
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creator Fernández, M.F.
Distefano, M.
Mangano, A.
Sen, L.
Aulicino, P.C.
description HIV-1 infection through vertical transmission provides a good model to evaluate intra-host viral evolution and allows to gain insight into the dynamics of viral populations. Our aim was to assess the diversity and dynamics of X4- and R5-using HIV-1 variants in vertically infected children who presented a switch in SI/ NSI phenotype in MT-2 cell assays during chronic infection. Through molecular cloning and next generation sequencing of the C2-V5 env fragment, we investigated HIV-1 evolution and co-receptor usage based on V3 loop prediction bioinformatic tools of longitudinal samples obtained from 4 children. In all cases, the phylogenetic relationships were assessed by Maximum-Likelihood trees constructed with MEGA 6.0. In two cases, V3 loop sequences predicted exclusively R5-using and or X4-using strains, while in another two a higher degree of concordance was observed between the phenotypic and genotypic characteristics. In 3 of the 4 cases, C2-V5 env sequences from different time points were intermingled in phylogenetic trees, with no segregation neither by time or tropism. In only one case monophyletic clustering defined groups of sequences with different co-receptor usage. Comparison of amino acid frequency between isolates with SI and NSI phenotype allowed the identification of 9 possible genetic determinants in subtype F C2-V5 region of env associated to SI/ NSI phenotype in these patients, one of which had previously been reported for subtype B. Overall, we found a low degree of correlation between phenotypic and genotypic properties of HIV-1 quasispecies in patients under chronic infection. Whether HIV-1 subtype or other factors influence the evolution of HIV-1 in vivo will require further research. •Vertically infected patients show HIV-1 phenotypic switch by the MT-2 assay.•In half of the subjects, co-existence of X4 and R5-using strains was identified.•Nine novel determinants of HIV-1 tropism in subtype F C2-V5 env were found.•No association between HIV-1 quasiespecies evolution and tropism over time
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.meegid.2019.104066
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subjects Cell Line
Child
Cloning, Molecular
Female
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
HIV Infections - transmission
HIV-1
HIV-1 - classification
HIV-1 - genetics
Humans
Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical
Intra-host dynamics
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Phenotype
Phylogeny
Quasispecies
Tropism
Vertical transmission
Viral Proteins - genetics
Viral Tropism
title Intra-host dynamics and co-receptor usage of HIV-1 quasi-species in vertically infected patients with phenotypic switch
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