Naidoo Vanessa L, Mann Jaclyn K, Noble Christie, Adland Emily, Carlson Jonathan M, Thomas Jake, Brumme Chanson J, Thobakgale-Tshabalala Christina F, Brumme Zabrina L, Brockman Mark A, Goulder Philip J R, Ndung'u Thumbi
HIV Pathogenesis Programme, Doris Duke Medical Research Institute, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Department of Paediatrics, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Virol. 2017 Aug 10;91(17). doi: 10.1128/JVI.00518-17. Print 2017 Sep 1.
In the large majority of cases, HIV infection is established by a single variant, and understanding the characteristics of successfully transmitted variants is relevant to prevention strategies. Few studies have investigated the viral determinants of mother-to-child transmission. To determine the impact of Gag-protease-driven viral replication capacity on mother-to-child transmission, the replication capacities of 148 recombinant viruses encoding plasma-derived Gag-protease from 53 nontransmitter mothers, 48 transmitter mothers, and 47 infected infants were assayed in an HIV-1-inducible green fluorescent protein reporter cell line. All study participants were infected with HIV-1 subtype C. There was no significant difference in replication capacities between the nontransmitter ( = 53) and transmitter ( = 44) mothers ( = 0.48). Infant-derived Gag-protease NL4-3 recombinant viruses ( = 41) were found to have a significantly lower Gag-protease-driven replication capacity than that of viruses derived from the mothers ( < 0.0001 by a paired test). High percent similarities to consensus subtype C Gag, p17, p24, and protease sequences were also found in the infants ( = 28) in comparison to their mothers ( = 0.07, = 0.002, = 0.03, and = 0.02, respectively, as determined by a paired test). These data suggest that of the viral quasispecies found in mothers, the HIV mother-to-child transmission bottleneck favors the transmission of consensus-like viruses with lower viral replication capacities. Understanding the characteristics of successfully transmitted HIV variants has important implications for preventative interventions. Little is known about the viral determinants of HIV mother-to-child transmission (MTCT). We addressed the role of viral replication capacity driven by Gag, a major structural protein that is a significant determinant of overall viral replicative ability and an important target of the host immune response, in the MTCT bottleneck. This study advances our understanding of the genetic bottleneck in MTCT by revealing that viruses transmitted to infants have a lower replicative ability as well as a higher similarity to the population consensus (in this case HIV subtype C) than those of their mothers. Furthermore, the observation that "consensus-like" virus sequences correspond to lower replication abilities yet appear to be preferentially transmitted suggests that viral characteristics favoring transmission are decoupled from those that enhance replicative capacity.
在绝大多数情况下,HIV感染是由单一变异株引起的,了解成功传播变异株的特征与预防策略相关。很少有研究调查母婴传播的病毒决定因素。为了确定Gag蛋白酶驱动的病毒复制能力对母婴传播的影响,在HIV-1诱导型绿色荧光蛋白报告细胞系中检测了148种重组病毒的复制能力,这些重组病毒编码来自53名非传播母亲、48名传播母亲和47名感染婴儿的血浆来源的Gag蛋白酶。所有研究参与者均感染HIV-1 C亚型。非传播母亲(n = 53)和传播母亲(n = 44)之间的复制能力没有显著差异(P = 0.48)。发现婴儿来源的Gag蛋白酶NL4-3重组病毒(n = 41)的Gag蛋白酶驱动的复制能力明显低于母亲来源的病毒(配对t检验,P < 0.0001)。与母亲相比,在婴儿(n = 28)中也发现与C亚型Gag、p17、p24和蛋白酶序列的一致性百分比很高(配对t检验分别确定为P = 0.07、P = 0.002、P = 0.03和P = 0.02)。这些数据表明,在母亲中发现的病毒准种中,HIV母婴传播瓶颈有利于传播具有较低病毒复制能力的类似一致性的病毒。了解成功传播的HIV变异株的特征对预防性干预具有重要意义。关于HIV母婴传播(MTCT)的病毒决定因素知之甚少。我们探讨了Gag驱动的病毒复制能力在MTCT瓶颈中的作用,Gag是一种主要的结构蛋白,是整体病毒复制能力的重要决定因素,也是宿主免疫反应的重要靶点。这项研究通过揭示传播给婴儿的病毒与其母亲的病毒相比具有较低的复制能力以及与群体一致性(在这种情况下为HIV C亚型)更高的相似性,推进了我们对MTCT中基因瓶颈的理解。此外,“类似一致性”病毒序列对应较低复制能力但似乎优先传播的观察结果表明,有利于传播的病毒特征与增强复制能力的特征是脱钩的。