Genetic identity, biological phenotype, and evolutionary pathways of transmitted/founder viruses in acute and early HIV-1 infection

Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Maria G. Salazar(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Brandon F. Keele(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Gerald H. Learn(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Elena E. Giorgi(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Hui Li(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Julie M. Decker(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Shuyi Wang(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Joshua Baalwa(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Matthias H. Kraus(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Nicholas F. Parrish(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Katharina S. Shaw(University of Alabama at Birmingham), M. Brad Guffey(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Katharine J. Bar(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Katie L. Davis(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Christina Ochsenbauer‐Jambor(University of Alabama at Birmingham), John C. Kappes(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Michael S. Saag(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Myron S. Cohen(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Joseph Mulenga, Cynthia A. Derdeyn(Emory University), Susan Allen(Emory University), Eric Hunter(Emory University), Martin Markowitz(Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center), Peter Hraber(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Alan S. Perelson(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Tanmoy Bhattacharya(Santa Fe Institute), Barton F. Haynes(Duke Medical Center), Bette Korber(Santa Fe Institute), Beatrice H. Hahn(University of Alabama at Birmingham), George M. Shaw(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
June 1, 2009
Cited by 786Open Access
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Abstract

Identification of full-length transmitted HIV-1 genomes could be instrumental in HIV-1 pathogenesis, microbicide, and vaccine research by enabling the direct analysis of those viruses actually responsible for productive clinical infection. We show in 12 acutely infected subjects (9 clade B and 3 clade C) that complete HIV-1 genomes of transmitted/founder viruses can be inferred by single genome amplification and sequencing of plasma virion RNA. This allowed for the molecular cloning and biological analysis of transmitted/founder viruses and a comprehensive genome-wide assessment of the genetic imprint left on the evolving virus quasispecies by a composite of host selection pressures. Transmitted viruses encoded intact canonical genes (gag-pol-vif-vpr-tat-rev-vpu-env-nef) and replicated efficiently in primary human CD4(+) T lymphocytes but much less so in monocyte-derived macrophages. Transmitted viruses were CD4 and CCR5 tropic and demonstrated concealment of coreceptor binding surfaces of the envelope bridging sheet and variable loop 3. 2 mo after infection, transmitted/founder viruses in three subjects were nearly completely replaced by viruses differing at two to five highly selected genomic loci; by 12-20 mo, viruses exhibited concentrated mutations at 17-34 discrete locations. These findings reveal viral properties associated with mucosal HIV-1 transmission and a limited set of rapidly evolving adaptive mutations driven primarily, but not exclusively, by early cytotoxic T cell responses.


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