Abstract

BackgroundHIV-1 subtype C demonstrates several biological properties distinct from other viral subtypes. One such variation is the duplication of PTAP motif in p6 Gag. PTAP motif is a key player in viral budding. Here, we studied the prevalence of PTAP motif duplication in subtype C viral strains in a longitudinal study.MethodsIn a prospective follow-up study, 65 HIV-1 seropositive drug-naive subjects were monitored in two different clinical cohorts of India for 2 years with repeated sampling at 6-month intervals. The viral RNA was extracted from plasma, the gag segment was amplified and sequenced. From a subset of viral isolates the sequences of pol, env and LTR were sequenced. Using HIV-1 gag amino acid sequences available from public databases and additional sequences derived from the Indian and South-African cohorts, we examined the nature of PTAP motif duplication in subtype C.ResultsIn 16% (8 of 50) of the primary viral strains of India, we identified a sequence duplication of the PTAP motif in Gag p6. The length of the sequence duplication varied from 6 to 14 amino acids in the viral isolates but remained fixed within a subject over a period of 24–36 month follow-up. In the duplicated motif, the core PTAP motif was invariable, but the flanking residues were highly variable. In an acute phase clinical cohort of South Africa, in a subset of 75 subjects, we found the presence of the PTAP duplication at a frequency of 29.3%. An analysis of the gag sequences from the extant databases showed that unlike other subtypes of HIV-1, subtype C has a natural propensity to generate the PTAP motif duplication at a significantly higher frequency and of greater length. Additionally, the global prevalence of PTAP duplication in subtype C appears to be increasing progressively over the past 30 years.ConclusionWe showed that in subtype C, the duplication of the PTAP motif in p6 Gag involves sequence stretches of greater length, and at a much higher frequency as compared to other HIV-1 subtypes. Given that subtype C naturally lacks the Alix binding motif, the acquisition of an additional PTAP motif may confer replication advantage on this HIV-1 subtype. Further investigation is warranted to examine the significance of PTAP motif duplication on the replicative fitness of HIV-1.

Highlights

  • HIV-1 subtype C demonstrates several biological properties distinct from other viral subtypes

  • PTAP duplications of longer sequence length are inserted at a higher frequency in subtype C In the present manuscript, we refer to all the viral strains that contain a complete PTAP motif duplication in Group specific antigen (Gag) p6 as the double-PTAP strains and those that lack such duplication as the single-PTAP strains

  • To examine the nature of the PTAP sequence insertion in HIV-1 Gag p6 in different HIV-1 genetic subtypes, we analyzed a total of 17,769 full-length HIV-1 Gag sequences available from the Database

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Summary

Introduction

HIV-1 subtype C demonstrates several biological properties distinct from other viral subtypes. One such variation is the duplication of PTAP motif in p6 Gag. PTAP motif is a key player in viral budding. HIV-1 subtypes differ from each other in genetic sequence, geographical distribution, co-receptor usage, pathogenic potential, and replication and transmission properties [2, 3]. The sequence insertions in subtype C are significantly longer permitting the acquisition of additional copies of biologically functional motifs, by the duplication of the adjacent sequences. This phenomenon is expected to enhance the replication fitness of the variant viral strains. We recently demonstrated that the 4-κB viral strains have been spreading in the population at a rapid rate in India dominating the 3-κB viruses [5]

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