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Amino-Acid Co-Variation in HIV-1 Gag Subtype C: HLA-Mediated Selection Pressure and Compensatory Dynamics

Authors :
Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard
Brander, Christian
Walker, Bruce D.
Goulder, Philip J. R.
Rolland, Morgane
Carlson, Jonathan M.
Manocheewa, Siriphan
Rousseau, Christine M.
Raugi, Dana N.
Learn, Gerald H.
Maust, Brandon S.
Coovadia, Hoosen M.
Ndung'u, Thumbi
Heckerman, David
Mullins, James I.
Swain, J. Victor
Lanxon-Cookson, Erinn
Deng, Wenjie
Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard
Brander, Christian
Walker, Bruce D.
Goulder, Philip J. R.
Rolland, Morgane
Carlson, Jonathan M.
Manocheewa, Siriphan
Rousseau, Christine M.
Raugi, Dana N.
Learn, Gerald H.
Maust, Brandon S.
Coovadia, Hoosen M.
Ndung'u, Thumbi
Heckerman, David
Mullins, James I.
Swain, J. Victor
Lanxon-Cookson, Erinn
Deng, Wenjie
Source :
PLoS
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Background Despite high potential for HIV-1 genetic variation, the emergence of some mutations is constrained by fitness costs, and may be associated with compensatory amino acid (AA) co-variation. To characterize the interplay between Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated pressure and HIV-1 evolutionary pathways, we investigated AA co-variation in Gag sequences obtained from 449 South African individuals chronically infected with HIV-1 subtype C. Methodology/Principal Findings Individuals with CTL responses biased toward Gag presented lower viral loads than individuals with under-represented Gag-specific CTL responses. Using methods that account for founder effects and HLA linkage disequilibrium, we identified 35 AA sites under Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)-restricted CTL selection pressure and 534 AA-to-AA interactions. Analysis of two-dimensional distances between co-varying residues revealed local stabilization mechanisms since 40% of associations involved neighboring residues. Key features of our co-variation analysis included sites with a high number of co-varying partners, such as HLA-associated sites, which had on average 55% more connections than other co-varying sites. Conclusions/Significance Clusters of co-varying AA around HLA-associated sites (especially at typically conserved sites) suggested that cooperative interactions act to preserve the local structural stability and protein function when CTL escape mutations occur. These results expose HLA-imprinted HIV-1 polymorphisms and their interlinked mutational paths in Gag that are likely due to opposite selective pressures from host CTL-mediated responses and viral fitness constraints.<br />Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (#43437)<br />American Foundation for AIDS Research (#107005-43-RFNT)<br />Center for AIDS Research (CFAR)<br />United States. Public Health Service (AI057005)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PLoS
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1141875432
Document Type :
Electronic Resource