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High rates of human immunodeficiency virus type I recombination: Near-random segregation of markers one kilobase apart in one round of viral replication

  1. Author:
    Rhodes, T.
    Wargo, H.
    Hu, W. S.
  2. Author Address

    NCI, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Bldg 535,Room 336, Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Frederick, MD 21702 USA W Virginia Univ, Sch Med & Dent, Dept Microbiol Immunol & Cell Biol, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA Hu WS NCI, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Bldg 535,Room 336, Frederick, MD 21702 USA
    1. Year: 2003
  1. Journal: Journal of Virology
    1. 77
    2. 20
    3. Pages: 11193-11200
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    One of the genetic consequences of packaging two copies of full-length viral RNA into a single retroviral virion is frequent recombination during reverse transcription. Many of the currently circulating strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are recombinants. Recombination can also accelerate the generation of multidrug-resistant HIV-1 and therefore presents challenges to effective antiviral therapy. In this study, we determined that HIV-1 recombination rates with markers 1.0, 1.3, and 1.9 kb apart were 42.4, 50.4, and 47.4% in one round of viral replication. Because the predicted recombination rate of two unlinked markers is 50%, we conclude that markers 1 kb apart segregated in a manner similar to that for two unlinked markers in one round of retroviral replication. These recombination rates are exceedingly high even among retroviruses. Recombination rates of markers separated by 1 kb are 4 and 4.7% in one round of spleen necrosis virus and murine leukemia virus replication, respectively. Therefore, HIV-1 recombination can be 10-fold higher than that of other retroviruses. Recombination can be observed only in the proviruses derived from heterozygous virions that contain two genotypically different RNAs. The high rates of HIV-1 recombination observed in our studies also indicate that heterozygous virions are formed efficiently during HIV-1 replication and most HIV-1 virions are capable of undergoing recombination. Our results demonstrate that recombination is an effective mechanism to break the genetic linkage between neighboring sequences, thereby reassorting the HIV-1 genome and increasing the diversity in the viral population.

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