11 research outputs found

    Viral Diversity and Diversification of Major Non-Structural Genes vif, vpr, vpu, tat exon 1 and rev exon 1 during Primary HIV-1 Subtype C Infection

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    To assess the level of intra-patient diversity and evolution of HIV-1C non-structural genes in primary infection, viral quasispecies obtained by single genome amplification (SGA) at multiple sampling timepoints up to 500 days post-seroconversion (p/s) were analyzed. The mean intra-patient diversity was 0.11% (95% CI; 0.02 to 0.20) for vif, 0.23% (95% CI; 0.08 to 0.38) for vpr, 0.35% (95% CI; βˆ’0.05 to 0.75) for vpu, 0.18% (95% CI; 0.01 to 0.35) for tat exon 1 and 0.30% (95% CI; 0.02 to 0.58) for rev exon 1 during the time period 0 to 90 days p/s. The intra-patient diversity increased gradually in all non-structural genes over the first year of HIV-1 infection, which was evident from the vif mean intra-patient diversity of 0.46% (95% CI; 0.28 to 0.64), vpr 0.44% (95% CI; 0.24 to 0.64), vpu 0.84% (95% CI; 0.55 to 1.13), tat exon 1 0.35% (95% CI; 0.14 to 0.56 ) and rev exon 1 0.42% (95% CI; 0.18 to 0.66) during the time period of 181 to 500 days p/s. There was a statistically significant increase in viral diversity for vif (pβ€Š=β€Š0.013) and vpu (pβ€Š=β€Š0.002). No associations between levels of viral diversity within the non-structural genes and HIV-1 RNA load during primary infection were found. The study details the dynamics of the non-structural viral genes during the early stages of HIV-1C infection

    HIV-1 subtype C phylogenetic relationship and diversity of HIV non-structural genes is consistent with the multiplicity of HIV-1 infection determined by analysis of the <i>env</i>/<i>gag</i> genes.

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    <p>A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree was reconstructed using Fastree2 (Price <i>et al</i>., 2010) using the GTR+G model for nucleotide substitution and visualized in Figtree v.1.1.3 <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0035491#pone.0035491-Rambaut1" target="_blank">[54]</a>. Alternative likelihood ratio tests <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0035491#pone.0035491-Anisimova1" target="_blank">[55]</a> >0.95 are shown by an asterisk. Subjects infected with multiple viral variants are colored red. Patient B and D subtrees (individual trees on grey background) show branching topology of earliest sampling (0–90 days p/s) and represent examples of single (subject B) and multiple (subject D) HIV-1 transmission.</p

    HIV-1C diversity, mean and 95% confidence intervals for non-structural genes <i>vif</i>, <i>vpr</i>, <i>vpu</i>, <i>tat</i> exon 1 and <i>rev</i> exon 1 over the first 500 days p/s.

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    <p>Viral diversity for each subject was calculated using maximum composite likelihood model <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0035491#pone.0035491-Tamura2" target="_blank">[56]</a>.</p

    HIV-1 subtyping by analysis of phylogenetic relationships of HIV-1 non-structural genes.

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    <p>The analyzed region of HIV-1 genome corresponded to nucleotide positions 5,041 to 6,310 in HXB2. Three sequences were randomly selected for each study subject (see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0035491#s2" target="_blank">Methods</a>). A phylogenetic tree was inferred by Mr. Bayes using GTR model. The convergence was reached after 10 M MCMC run. The consensus tree was visualized in Figtree v.1.3.1 <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0035491#pone.0035491-Rambaut1" target="_blank">[54]</a>. Clade credibility values of >0.95 shown by asterisk, Subtype D cluster showed the support of 0.93 indicated by + symbol. HIV-1 subtype C reference sequences are shown as blue circles. All non-subtype C group M reference sequences are shown at the bottom of the phylogenetic tree. SIV sequence (CPZ.CM98.CAM3.AF115393) was used as an outgroup.</p

    Individual distribution of pairwise distances for each of the non-stuctural genes,<i>vif</i> (HXB2 start 5041 to 5619), <i>vpr</i> (HXB2 start 5559 to 5850), <i>vpu</i> (HXB2 start 6062 to 6310), <i>tat</i> exon 1 (HXB2 start 5831 to 6045), and <i>rev</i> exon 1(HXB2 start 5970 to 6045).

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    <p>Individual distribution of pairwise distances for each of the non-stuctural genes,<i>vif</i> (HXB2 start 5041 to 5619), <i>vpr</i> (HXB2 start 5559 to 5850), <i>vpu</i> (HXB2 start 6062 to 6310), <i>tat</i> exon 1 (HXB2 start 5831 to 6045), and <i>rev</i> exon 1(HXB2 start 5970 to 6045).</p

    In Silico Analysis of Hepatitis B Virus Occult Associated Mutations in Botswana Using a Novel Algorithm

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    Occult hepatitis B infections (OBI) represent a reservoir of undiagnosed and untreated hepatitis B virus (HBV), hence the need to identify mutations that lead to this phenotype. Functionally characterizing these mutations by in vitro studies is time-consuming and expensive. To bridge this gap, in silico approaches, which predict the effect of amino acid (aa) variants on HBV protein function, are necessary. We developed an algorithm for determining the relevance of OBI-associated mutations using in silico approaches. A 3 kb fragment of subgenotypes A1 and D3 from 24 chronic HBV-infected (CHB) and 24 OBI participants was analyzed. To develop and validate the algorithm, the effects of 68 previously characterized occult-associated mutations were determined using three computational tools: PolyPhen2, SNAP2, and PROVEAN. The percentage of deleterious mutations (with impact on protein function) predicted were 52 (76.5%) by PolyPhen2, 55 (80.9%) by SNAP2, and 65 (95.6%) by PROVEAN. At least two tools correctly predicted 59 (86.8%) mutations as deleterious. To identify OBI-associated mutations exclusive to Botswana, study sequences were compared to CHB sequences from GenBank. Of the 43 OBI-associated mutations identified, 26 (60.5%) were predicted by at least two tools to have an impact on protein function. To our knowledge, this is the first study to use in silico approaches to determine the impact of OBI-associated mutations, thereby identifying potential candidates for functional analysis to facilitate mechanistic studies of the OBI phenotype
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