4.8 Article

A robust measure of HIV-1 population turnover within chronically infected individuals

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 1902-1912

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msh196

Keywords

intra-host HIV evolution; effective population size; chronically infected individual

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01-CA089441] Funding Source: Medline

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A simple nonparameteric test for population structure was applied to temporally spaced samples of HIV-1 sequences from the gag-pol region within two chronically infected individuals. The results show that temporal structure can be detected for samples separated by about 22 months or more. The performance of the method, which was originally proposed to detect geographic structure, was tested for temporally spaced samples using neutral coalescent simulations. Simulations showed that the method is robust to variation in samples sizes and mutation rates, to the presence/absence of recombination, and that the power to detect temporal structure is high. By comparing levels of temporal structure in simulations to the levels observed in real data, we estimate the effective intra-individual population size of HIV-1 to be between 10(3) and 10(4) viruses, which is in agreement with some previous estimates. Using this estimate and a simple measure of sequence diversity, we estimate an effective neutral mutation rate of about 5 x 10(-6) per site per generation in the gag-pol region. The definition and interpretation of estimates of such effective population parameters are discussed.

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