Intrahost evolution of the HIV-2 capsid correlates with progression to AIDS

HIV-2 infection will progress to AIDS in most patients without treatment, albeit at approximately half the rate of HIV-1 infection. HIV-2 capsid (p26) amino acid polymorphisms are associated with lower viral loads and enhanced processing of T cell epitopes, which may lead to protective Gag-specific...

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Hauptverfasser: Boswell, M.T, Nazziwa, J, Kuroki, K, Palm, A, Karlson, S, Månsson, F, Biague, A, da Silva, Z.J, Onyango, C.O, de Silva, T.I, Jaye, A, Norrgren, H, Medstrand, P, Jansson, M, Maenaka, K, Rowland-Jones, S.L, Esbjörnsson, J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:HIV-2 infection will progress to AIDS in most patients without treatment, albeit at approximately half the rate of HIV-1 infection. HIV-2 capsid (p26) amino acid polymorphisms are associated with lower viral loads and enhanced processing of T cell epitopes, which may lead to protective Gag-specific T cell responses common in slower progressors. Lower virus evolutionary rates, and positive selection on conserved residues in HIV-2 env have been associated with slower progression to AIDS. In this study we analysed 369 heterochronous HIV-2 p26 sequences from 12 participants with a median age of 30 years at enrolment. CD4% change over time was used to stratify participants into relative faster and slower progressor groups. We analysed p26 sequence diversity evolution, measured site-specific selection pressures and evolutionary rates, and determined if these evolutionary parameters were associated with progression status. Faster progressors had lower CD4% and faster CD4% decline rates. Median pairwise sequence diversity was higher in faster progressors (5.7x10-3 versus 1.4x10-3 base substitutions per site, P
DOI:10.1093/ve/veac075