Abstract

BackgroundUnlike in HIV-1 infection, the majority of HIV-2 patients produce broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies, control viral replication and survive as elite controllers. The identification of the molecular, structural and evolutionary footprints underlying these very distinct immunological and clinical outcomes may lead to the development of new strategies for the prevention and treatment of HIV infection.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe performed a side-by-side molecular, evolutionary and structural comparison of the C2, V3 and C3 envelope regions from HIV-1 and HIV-2. These regions contain major antigenic targets and are important for receptor binding. In HIV-2, these regions also have immune modulatory properties. We found that these regions are significantly more variable in HIV-1 than in HIV-2. Within each virus, C3 is the most entropic region followed by either C2 (HIV-2) or V3 (HIV-1). The C3 region is well exposed in the HIV-2 envelope and is under strong diversifying selection suggesting that, like in HIV-1, it may harbour neutralizing epitopes. Notably, however, extreme diversification of C2 and C3 seems to be deleterious for HIV-2 and prevent its transmission. Computer modelling simulations showed that in HIV-2 the V3 loop is much less exposed than C2 and C3 and has a retractile conformation due to a physical interaction with both C2 and C3. The concealed and conserved nature of V3 in the HIV-2 is consistent with its lack of immunodominancy in vivo and with its role in preventing immune activation. In contrast, HIV-1 had an extended and accessible V3 loop that is consistent with its immunodominant and neutralizing nature.Conclusions/SignificanceWe identify significant structural and functional constrains to the diversification and evolution of C2, V3 and C3 in the HIV-2 envelope but not in HIV-1. These studies highlight fundamental differences in the biology and infection of HIV-1 and HIV-2 and in their mode of interaction with the human immune system and may inform new vaccine and therapeutic interventions against these viruses.

Highlights

  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection affects more than 40 million individuals throughout the world

  • We compared the inter-patient genetic diversity of HIV-1 and HIV-2 in two different datasets: HIV-1 group M and HIV-2 group A sequences from all over the world (Control dataset composed of reference sequences) and newly derived HIV-1 and HIV-2 sequences obtained from Portuguese (PT) patients

  • We have analysed the C2-V3-C3 envelope region from a significant number of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infected patients living in Portugal and worldwide

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Summary

Introduction

Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection affects more than 40 million individuals throughout the world. It is caused mainly by isolates belonging to group M. Within this group there are nine different subtypes named A to H, six subsubtypes (F1, F2, A1–A4) and at least thirty six recombinant forms named CRF01 up to CRF36 [1]. Eight different HIV-2 groups named A through H have been reported but only groups A and B cause human epidemics [6,7,8,9]. Isolates from group A are, responsible for the vast majority of HIV-2 infections worldwide [10]. The identification of the molecular, structural and evolutionary footprints underlying these very distinct immunological and clinical outcomes may lead to the development of new strategies for the prevention and treatment of HIV infection

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