4.6 Article

Generation of infectious molecular clones of simian immunodeficiency virus from fecal consensus sequences of wild chimpanzees

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 14, Pages 7463-7475

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00551-07

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P51 RR000165] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI050529, R01 AI58715, R01 AI058715, P30 AI27767, R01 AI50529, P30 AI027767] Funding Source: Medline

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Studies of simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) in their endangered primate hosts are of obvious medical and public health importance, but technically challenging. Although SIV-specific antibodies and nucleic acids have been detected in primate fecal samples, recovery of replication-competent virus from such samples has not been achieved. Here, we report the construction of infectious molecular clones of SIVcpz from fecal viral consensus sequences. Subgenomic fragments comprising a complete provirus were amplified from fecal RNA of three wild-living chimpanzees and sequenced directly. One set of amplicons was concatenated using overlap extension PCR. The resulting clone (TAN1.24) contained intact genes and regulatory regions but was replication defective. It also differed from the fecal consensus sequence by 76 nucleotides. Stepwise elimination of all missense mutations generated several constructs with restored replication potential. The clone that yielded the most infectious virus (TAN1.910) was identical to the consensus sequence in both protein and long terminal repeat sequences. Two additional SIVcpz clones were constructed by direct synthesis of fecal consensus sequences. One of these(TAN3.1) yielded fully infectious virus, while the second one (TAN2.69) required modification at one ambiguous site in the viral pol gene for biological activity. All three reconstructed proviruses produced infectious virions that replicated in human and chimpanzee CD4(+) T cells, were CCR5 tropic, and resembled primary human immunodeficiency virus type I isolates in their neutralization phenotype. These results provide the first direct evidence that naturally occurring SfVcpz strains already have many of the biological properties required for persistent infection of humans, including CD4 and CCR5 dependence and neutralization resistance. Moreover, they outline a new strategy for obtaining medically important SIV isolates that have thus far eluded investigation. Such isolates are needed to identify viral determinants that contribute to cross-species transmission and host adaptation.

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