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HLA-Associated Clinical Progression Correlates with Epitope Reversion Rates in Early Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection

  1. Author:
    Duda, A.
    Lee-Turner, L.
    Fox, J.
    Robinson, N.
    Dustan, S.
    Kaye, S.
    Fryer, H.
    Carrington, M.
    McClure, M.
    Mclean, A. R.
    Fidler, S.
    Weber, J.
    Phillips, R. E.
    Frater, A. J.
  2. Author Address

    Duda, A.; Lee-Turner, L.; Robinson, N.; Phillips, R. E.; Frater, A. J.] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Clin Med, Oxford OX1 3SY, England. [Duda, A.; Lee-Turner, L.; Robinson, N.; Fryer, H.; Mclean, A. R.; Phillips, R. E.; Frater, A. J.] James Martin 21st Century Sch, Oxford OX1 3SY, England. [Fox, J.; Dustan, S.; Kaye, S.; McClure, M.; Fidler, S.; Weber, J.] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Div Med, Wright Fleming Inst, St Marys Hosp, London W2 1PG, England. [Fryer, H.; Mclean, A. R.] Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Oxford OX1 3PS, England. [Carrington, M.] NCI, Basic Res Program, SAIC Frederick, Lab Genom Div, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.
    1. Year: 2009
  1. Journal: Journal of Virology
    1. 83
    2. 3
    3. Pages: 1228-1239
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) can evade immunity shortly after transmission to a new host but the clinical significance of this early viral adaptation in HIV infection is not clear. We present an analysis of sequence variation from a longitudinal cohort study of HIV adaptation in 189 acute seroconverters followed for up to 3 years. We measured the rates of variation within well-defined epitopes to determine associations with the HLA-linked hazard of disease progression. We found early reversion across both the gag and pol genes, with a 10-fold faster rate of escape in gag (2.2 versus 0.27 forward mutations/1,000 amino acid sites). For most epitopes (23/34), variation in the HLA-matched and HLA-unmatched controls was similar. For a minority of epitopes (8/34, and generally associated with HLA class I alleles that confer clinical benefit), new variants appeared early and consistently over the first 3 years of infection. Reversion occurred early at a rate which was HLA-dependent and correlated with the HLA class 1-associated relative hazard of disease progression and death (P = 0.0008), reinforcing the association between strong cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses, viral fitness, and disease status. These data provide a comprehensive overview of viral adaptation in the first 3 years of infection. Our findings of HLA-dependent reversion suggest that costs are borne by some escape variants which may benefit the host, a finding contrary to a simple immune evasion paradigm. These epitopes, which are both strongly and frequently recognized, and for which escape involves a high cost to the virus, have the potential to optimize vaccine design.

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External Sources

  1. PMID: 19019964

Library Notes

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