Abstract

BackgroundHuman immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has a biased nucleotide composition different from human genes. This raises the question of how evolution has chosen the nucleotide sequence of HIV-1 that is observed today, or to what extent the actual encoding contributes to virus replication capacity, evolvability and pathogenesis. Here, we applied the previously described synthetic attenuated virus engineering (SAVE) approach to HIV-1.ResultsUsing synonymous codon pairs, we rationally recoded and codon pair–optimized and deoptimized different moieties of the HIV-1 gag and pol genes. Deoptimized viruses had significantly lower viral replication capacity in MT-4 and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Varying degrees of ex vivo attenuation were obtained, depending upon both the specific deoptimized region and the number of deoptimized codons. A protease optimized virus carrying 38 synonymous mutations was not attenuated and displayed a replication capacity similar to that of the wild-type virus in MT-4 cells and PBMCs. Although attenuation is based on several tens of nucleotide changes, deoptimized HIV-1 reverted to wild-type virulence after serial passages in MT-4 cells. Remarkably, no reversion was observed in the optimized virus.ConclusionThese data demonstrate that SAVE is a useful strategy to phenotypically affect the replicative properties of HIV-1.

Highlights

  • Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has a biased nucleotide composition different from human genes

  • Our results demonstrate that the codon pair recoding of HIV-1 gag or protease coding regions significantly modified HIV-1 replication capacity in MT-4 cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)

  • This study demonstrates that synonymous codon pair reengineering is an effective tool to phenotypically affect the replicative properties of HIV-1

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has a biased nucleotide composition different from human genes. This raises the question of how evolution has chosen the nucleotide sequence of HIV-1 that is observed today, or to what extent the actual encoding contributes to virus replication capacity, evolvability and pathogenesis. SAVE works by recoding and synthesizing the viral genome; the wild-type amino acid sequence is preserved, but the existing synonymous codons are rearranged to create a suboptimal arrangement of codon pairs [3]. The overall codon usage in a genome can differ dramatically among species, less so among closely related species [13] It is unclear why some codon pairs are under- or overrepresented. The codon pair GCCGAA is strongly underrepresented and is used only one-seventh as often as GCAGAG [3]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call