Phylogenetic estimation of the viral fitness landscape of HIV-1 set-point viral load

Archive ouverte

Zhao, Lele | Wymant, Chris | Blanquart, François | Golubchik, Tanya | Gall, Astrid | Bakker, Margreet | Bezemer, Daniela | Hall, Matthew | Ong, Swee Hoe | Albert, Jan | Bannert, Norbert | Fellay, Jacques | Grabowski, M Kate | Gunsenheimer-Bartmeyer, Barbara | Günthard, Huldrych, F | Kivelä, Pia | Kouyos, Roger, D | Laeyendecker, Oliver | Meyer, Laurence | Porter, Kholoud | van Sighem, Ard | van der Valk, Marc | Berkhout, Ben | Kellam, Paul | Cornelissen, Marion | Reiss, Peter | Fraser, Christophe | Ferretti, Luca

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press -

International audience. Set-point viral load (SPVL), a common measure of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 virulence, is partially determined by viral genotype. Epidemiological evidence suggests that this viral property has been under stabilising selection, with a typical optimum for the virus between 104 and 105 copies of viral RNA per ml. Here we aimed to detect transmission fitness differences between viruses from individuals with different SPVLs directly from phylogenetic trees inferred from whole-genome sequences. We used the local branching index (LBI) as a proxy for transmission fitness. We found that LBI is more sensitive to differences in infectiousness than to differences in the duration of the infectious state. By analysing subtype-B samples from the Bridging the Evolution and Epidemiology of HIV in Europe project, we inferred a significant positive relationship between SPVL and LBI up to approximately 105 copies/ml, with some evidence for a peak around this value of SPVL. This is evidence of selection against low values of SPVL in HIV-1 subtype-B strains, likely related to lower infectiousness, and perhaps a peak in the transmission fitness in the expected range of SPVL. The less prominent signatures of selection against higher SPVL could be explained by an inherent limit of the method or the deployment of antiretroviral therapy.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

A highly virulent variant of HIV-1 circulating in the Netherlands

Archive ouverte | Wymant, Chris | CCSD

Auteurs : ATHENA HIV Observational Cohort†, the BEEHIVE Collaboration. International audience. We discovered a highly virulent variant of subtype-B HIV-1 in the Netherlands. One hundred nine individuals with this va...

Easy and accurate reconstruction of whole HIV genomes from short-read sequence data with shiver

Archive ouverte | Wymant, Chris | CCSD

International audience. Studying the evolution of viruses and their molecular epidemiology relies on accurate viral sequence data, so that small differences between similar viruses can be meaningfully interpreted. D...

HIV-phyloTSI: Subtype-independent estimation of time since HIV-1 infection for cross-sectional measures of population incidence using deep sequence data

Archive ouverte | Golubchik, Tanya | CCSD

Estimating the time since HIV infection (TSI) at population level is essential for tracking changes in the global HIV epidemic. Most methods for determining duration of infection classify samples into recent and non-recent and are...

Chargement des enrichissements...