1. Infectious DNA Clone of HIV Type 1 A/G Recombinant (CRF02_AG) Replicable in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells
- Author
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William Ampofo, Koichi Ishikawa, Masashi Tatsumi, Michiyuki Matsuda, Mikako Takahoko, Naoki Yamamoto, and Minoru Tobiume
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Immunology ,DNA, Recombinant ,Clone (cell biology) ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,Transfection ,Virus Replication ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Virus ,law.invention ,Blood cell ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,immune system diseases ,law ,Virology ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Humans ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,virus diseases ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,HIV-1 ,Leukocytes, Mononuclear ,Recombinant DNA ,DNA - Abstract
We constructed an infectious DNA clone of the HIV-1 A/G recombinant 97GH-AG2, which was isolated in Ghana in 1997 and was classified originally as subtype A. By phylogenetic and recombination breakpoint analyses, p97GH-AG2 was grouped in the circulating form of A/G recombinants (CRF02_AG) and was found to contain the least amount of subtype G-derived region among the known CRF02_AG HIV-1 DNAs. This result suggests that CRF02_AG may be a predominant form in Ghana. Virions produced by transfection of p97GH-AG2 into 293T cells grew in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). 97GH-AG2 also replicated efficiently in CCR5-expressing HeLa cells, MAGIC5, but only weakly in the parent MAGI cells, indicating that 97GH-AG2 uses mostly CCR5 as a coreceptor. Isolation of the first HIV-1 (CRF02_AG) DNA clone that replicates in PBMCs will accelerate the molecular analysis of this subtype.
- Published
- 2001
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