Department of Microbiology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Department of Mathematics, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Viruses. 2018 Feb 27;10(3):99. doi: 10.3390/v10030099.
The ability of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to avoid recognition by humoral and cellular immunity (viral escape) is well-documented, but the strength of the immune response needed to cause such a viral escape remains poorly quantified. Several previous studies observed a more rapid escape of HIV from CD8 T cell responses in the acute phase of infection compared to chronic infection. The rate of HIV escape was estimated with the help of simple mathematical models, and results were interpreted to suggest that CD8 T cell responses causing escape in acute HIV infection may be more efficient at killing virus-infected cells than responses that cause escape in chronic infection, or alternatively, that early escapes occur in epitopes mutations in which there is minimal fitness cost to the virus. However, these conclusions were challenged on several grounds, including linkage and interference of multiple escape mutations due to a low population size and because of potential issues associated with modifying the data to estimate escape rates. Here we use a sampling method which does not require data modification to show that previous results on the decline of the viral escape rate with time since infection remain unchanged. However, using this method we also show that estimates of the escape rate are highly sensitive to the time interval between measurements, with longer intervals biasing estimates of the escape rate downwards. Our results thus suggest that data modifications for early and late escapes were not the primary reason for the observed decline in the escape rate with time since infection. However, longer sampling periods for escapes in chronic infection strongly influence estimates of the escape rate. More frequent sampling of viral sequences in chronic infection may improve our understanding of factors influencing the rate of HIV escape from CD8 T cell responses.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)逃避体液和细胞免疫识别的能力(病毒逃逸)已有充分记录,但引起这种病毒逃逸所需的免疫反应强度仍未得到充分量化。几项先前的研究观察到,与慢性感染相比,HIV 在感染的急性期从 CD8 T 细胞反应中更快地逃逸。HIV 逃逸的速度是借助简单的数学模型来估计的,结果的解释表明,急性 HIV 感染中导致逃逸的 CD8 T 细胞反应可能比导致慢性感染中逃逸的反应更有效地杀死病毒感染的细胞,或者,早期的逃逸发生在抗原表位突变中,病毒的适应性成本最小。然而,这些结论受到了几个方面的质疑,包括由于群体规模较小而导致的多个逃逸突变的关联和干扰,以及与修改数据以估计逃逸率相关的潜在问题。在这里,我们使用一种不需要数据修改的抽样方法来表明,以前关于随着感染后时间的推移病毒逃逸率下降的结果仍然不变。然而,使用这种方法,我们还表明,逃逸率的估计值对测量之间的时间间隔高度敏感,较长的间隔会使逃逸率的估计值向下偏倚。因此,我们的结果表明,用于早期和晚期逃逸的数据修改并不是观察到的逃逸率随感染后时间下降的主要原因。然而,慢性感染中逃逸的更长采样期强烈影响逃逸率的估计值。更频繁地对慢性感染中的病毒序列进行采样可能会提高我们对影响 HIV 从 CD8 T 细胞反应中逃逸速度的因素的理解。