4.7 Article

Spontaneous Mutations in HIV-1 Gag, Protease, RT p66 in the First Replication Cycle and How They Appear: Insights from an In Vitro Assay on Mutation Rates and Types

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出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22010370

关键词

HIV; Gag; protease; reverse transcriptase; mutation rate; drug resistance

资金

  1. A*STAR Industry Alignment Fund (IAF) Grant [IAF111149]

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The study found that in an in vitro selection pressure free system, the background mutation rates for Gag, protease, and RT p66 were 4.71 x 10(-5), 6.03 x 10(-5), and 7.09 x 10(-5) mutations/bp, respectively. Gag and p66 genes showed a large number of 'A to G' mutations. Comparison with silently mutated p66 sequences revealed an increase in mutation rates and 'A to G' mutations in regions reminiscent of ADAR neighbor sequence preferences.
While drug resistant mutations in HIV-1 are largely credited to its error prone HIV-1 RT, the time point in the infection cycle that these mutations can arise and if they appear spontaneously without selection pressures both remained enigmatic. Many HIV-1 RT mutational in vitro studies utilized reporter genes (LacZ) as a template to investigate these questions, thereby not accounting for the possible contribution of viral codon usage. To address this gap, we investigated HIV-1 RT mutation rates and biases on its own Gag, protease, and RT p66 genes in an in vitro selection pressure free system. We found rare clinical mutations with a general avoidance of crucial functional sites in the background mutations rates for Gag, protease, and RT p66 at 4.71 x 10(-5), 6.03 x 10(-5), and 7.09 x 10(-5) mutations/bp, respectively. Gag and p66 genes showed a large number of 'A to G' mutations. Comparisons with silently mutated p66 sequences showed an increase in mutation rates (1.88 x 10(-4) mutations/bp) and that 'A to G' mutations occurred in regions reminiscent of ADAR neighbor sequence preferences. Mutational free energies of the 'A to G' mutations revealed an avoidance of destabilizing effects, with the natural p66 gene codon usage providing barriers to disruptive amino acid changes. Our study demonstrates the importance of studying mutation emergence in HIV genes in a RT-PCR in vitro selection pressure free system to understand how fast drug resistance can emerge, providing transferable applications to how new viral diseases and drug resistances can emerge.

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