Abstract

We demonstrate that at least three different promoter variant strains of HIV-1 subtype C have been gradually expanding and replacing the standard subtype C viruses in India, and possibly in South Africa and other global regions, over the past decade. The new viral strains contain an additional NF-κB, NF-κB-like, or RBEIII site in the viral promoter. Although the acquisition of an additional RBEIII site is a property shared by all the HIV-1 subtypes, acquiring an additional NF-κB site remains an exclusive property of subtype C. The acquired κB site is genetically distinct, binds the p50-p65 heterodimer, and strengthens the viral promoter at the levels of transcription initiation and elongation. The 4-κB viruses dominate the 3-κB "isogenic" viral strains in pairwise competition assays in T-cell lines, primary cells, and the ecotropic human immunodeficiency virus mouse model. The dominance of the 4-κB viral strains is also evident in the natural context when the subjects are coinfected with κB-variant viral strains. The mean plasma viral loads, but not CD4 counts, are significantly different in 4-κB infection suggesting that these newly emerging strains are probably more infectious. It is possible that higher plasma viral loads underlie selective transmission of the 4-κB viral strains. Several publications previously reported duplication or deletion of diverse transcription factor-binding sites in the viral promoter. Unlike previous reports, our study provides experimental evidence that the new viral strains gained a potential selective advantage as a consequence of the acquired transcription factor-binding sites and importantly that these strains have been expanding at the population level.

Highlights

  • Viral evolution of Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is dynamic and moving towards a higher order of replicative fitness

  • Our study provides experimental evidence that the new viral strains gained a potential selective advantage as a consequence of the acquired transcription factor-binding sites and importantly that these strains have been expanding at the population level

  • Positive Selection of Variant Viral Strains Captured at the Population Level—Current results suggest the emergence of at least three different and novel viral strains of subtype C in India, South Africa, and probably other geographical locations where this viral subtype is dominant (Fig. 1)

Read more

Summary

Background

Viral evolution of HIV-1 is dynamic and moving towards a higher order of replicative fitness. Our study provides experimental evidence that the new viral strains gained a potential selective advantage as a consequence of the acquired transcription factor-binding sites and importantly that these strains have been expanding at the population level. A comparison of subtype C LTR (C-LTR) with that of others identified several distinct differences in the composition of the TFBS, including NF-␬B [8, 9], NFAT, upstream stimulatory factor [10], and other regulatory elements such as the TATA box, and the TAR region [11,12,13] Of these variations in the LTR, subtype-specific patterns within the enhancer element, exclusively consisting of the NF-␬B motifs, are important given the profound impact NF-␬B has on gene expression regulation from the viral promoter. In subtype B, immediately upstream of the viral enhancer element, an insertion of unique sequences 15–34 bp in length was reported in ϳ38% of isolates in 1990s [22] or in at least 14.2% of the viral isolates in our present analysis; this finding

The abbreviations used are
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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