In vitro dynamics of HIV-1 BF intersubtype recombinants genomic regions involved in the regulation of gene expression

被引:7
作者
Carobene, Mauricio G. [1 ]
Rodriguez Rodrigues, Christian [1 ]
De Candia, Cristian A. [1 ]
Turk, Gabriela [1 ]
Salomon, Horacio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Buenos Aires, Natl Reference Ctr AIDS, Dept Microbiol, Sch Med, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
来源
VIROLOGY JOURNAL | 2009年 / 6卷
关键词
HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS; VIRION INCORPORATION; PROTEIN VPR; TYPE-1; REPLICATION; INFECTION; LTR; TRANSCRIPTION; TAT; PHOSPHORYLATION;
D O I
10.1186/1743-422X-6-107
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
HIV-1 intersubtype recombination is a very common phenomenon that has been shown to frequently affect different viral genomic regions. Vpr and Tat are viral proteins known to interact with viral promoter (LTR) during the replication cycle. This interaction is mainly involved in the regulation of viral gene expression, so, any structural changes in the LTR and/or these regulatory proteins may have an important impact on viral replication and spread. It has been reported that these genetic structures underwent recombination in BF variants widely spread in South America. To gain more insight of the consequences of the BF intersubtype recombination phenomenon on these different but functionally related genomic regions we designed and performed and in vitro study that allowed the detection and recovery of intersubtype recombinants sequences and its subsequent analysis. Our results indicate that recombination affects differentially these regions, showing evidence of a time-space relationship between the changes observed in the viral promoter and the ones observed in the Vpr/Tat coding region. This supports the idea of intersubtype recombination as a mechanism that promotes biological adaptation and compensates fitness variations.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]   Phosphorylation of Vpr regulates HIV type 1 nuclear import and macrophage infection [J].
Agostini, I ;
Popov, S ;
Hao, T ;
Li, JH ;
Dubrovsky, L ;
Chaika, O ;
Chaika, N ;
Lewis, R ;
Bukrinsky, M .
AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2002, 18 (04) :283-288
[2]   HIV-1 Vpr-induced apoptosis is cell cycle dependent and requires Bax but not ANT [J].
Andersen, Joshua L. ;
DeHart, Jason L. ;
Zimmerman, Erik S. ;
Ardon, Orly ;
Kim, Baek ;
Jacquot, Guillaume ;
Benichou, Serge ;
Planelles, Vicente .
PLOS PATHOGENS, 2006, 2 (12) :1106-1119
[3]  
Avila MM, 2002, J ACQ IMMUN DEF SYND, V29, P422, DOI 10.1097/00126334-200204010-00015
[4]   A genetic-algorithm approach to simulating human immunodeficiency virus evolution reveals the strong impact of multiply infected cells and recombination [J].
Bocharov, G ;
Ford, NJ ;
Edwards, J ;
Breinig, T ;
Wain-Hobson, S ;
Meyerhans, A .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 2005, 86 :3109-3118
[5]   Control of Stochastic Gene Expression by Host Factors at the HIV Promoter [J].
Burnett, John C. ;
Miller-Jensen, Kathryn ;
Shah, Priya S. ;
Arkin, Adam P. ;
Schaffer, David V. .
PLOS PATHOGENS, 2009, 5 (01)
[6]   Diverse BF recombinants have spread widely since the introduction of HIV-1 into South America [J].
Carr, JK ;
Avila, M ;
Carrillo, MG ;
Salomon, H ;
Hierholzer, J ;
Watanaveeradej, V ;
Pando, MA ;
Negrete, M ;
Russell, KL ;
Sanchez, J ;
Birx, DL ;
Andrade, R ;
Vinoles, J ;
McCutchan, FE .
AIDS, 2001, 15 (15) :F41-F47
[7]   Mother-to-child HIV type 1 transmission in Argentina: BF recombinants have predominated in infected children since the mid-1980s [J].
Carrillo, MG ;
Avila, M ;
Hierholzer, J ;
Pando, M ;
Martinez, PL ;
McCutchan, FE ;
Carr, JK .
AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2002, 18 (07) :477-483
[8]   Extensive recombination among human immunodeficiency virus type 1 quasispecies makes an important contribution to viral diversity in individual patients [J].
Charpentier, C ;
Nora, T ;
Tenaillon, O ;
Clavel, F ;
Hance, AJ .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2006, 80 (05) :2472-2482
[9]   GENETIC-RECOMBINATION OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS [J].
CLAVEL, F ;
HOGGAN, MD ;
WILLEY, RL ;
STREBEL, K ;
MARTIN, MA ;
REPASKE, R .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1989, 63 (03) :1455-1459
[10]   HIV-1 Vpr binding to HIV-1 LTR C/EBP cis-acting elements and adjacent regions is sequence-specific [J].
Hogan, TH ;
Nonnemacher, MR ;
Krebs, FC ;
Henderson, A ;
Wigdahl, B .
BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2003, 57 (01) :41-48