Initial Fitness Recovery of HIV-1 Is Associated with Quasispecies Heterogeneity and Can Occur without Modifications in the Consensus Sequence
Open Access
- 26 April 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 5 (4) , e10319
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010319
Abstract
Fitness recovery of HIV-1 “in vitro” was studied using viral clones that had their fitness decreased as a result of plaque-to-plaque passages. After ten large population passages, the viral populations showed an average increase of fitness, although with wide variations among clones. While 5 clones showed significant fitness increases, 3 clones showed increases that were only marginally significant (p<0.1), and 4 clones did not show any change. Fitness recovery was not accompanied by an increase in p24 production, but was associated with an increase in viral titer. Few mutations (an average of 2 mutations per genome) were detected in the consensus nucleotide sequence of the entire genome in all viral populations. Five of the populations did not fix any mutation, and three of them displayed marginally significant fitness increases, illustrating that fitness recovery can occur without detectable alterations of the consensus genomic sequence. The investigation of other possible viral factors associated with the initial steps of fitness recovery, showed that viral quasispecies heterogeneity increased between the initial clones and the passaged populations. A direct statistical correlation between viral heterogeneity and viral fitness was obtained. Thus, the initial fitness recovery of debilitated HIV-1 clones was mediated by an increase in quasispecies heterogeneity. This observation, together with the invariance of the consensus sequence despite fitness increases demonstrates the relevance of quasispecies heterogeneity in the evolution of HIV-1 in cell culture.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- The first T cell response to transmitted/founder virus contributes to the control of acute viremia in HIV-1 infectionThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2009
- Hidden Virulence Determinants in a Viral Quasispecies In VivoJournal of Virology, 2008
- Deciphering Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Transmission and Early Envelope Diversification by Single-Genome Amplification and SequencingJournal of Virology, 2008
- HIV-1 protease and reverse transcriptase mutations for drug resistance surveillanceAIDS, 2007
- The West Nile virus mutant spectrum is host-dependant and a determinant of mortality in miceVirology, 2006
- Increased Fidelity Reduces Poliovirus Fitness and Virulence under Selective Pressure in MicePLoS Pathogens, 2005
- Invariant aphthovirus consensus nucleotide sequence in the transition to error catastropheInfection, Genetics and Evolution, 2005
- Molecular Basis of Fitness Loss and Fitness Recovery in Vesicular Stomatitis VirusJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- Multiple molecular pathways for fitness recovery of an RNA virus debilitated by operation of Muller’s ratchet 1 1Edited by J. KarnJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choiceNucleic Acids Research, 1994