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Journal of Virology, April 1999, p. 2790-2797, Vol. 73, No. 4
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Effect of the Attenuating Deletion and of Sequence Alterations Evolving In Vivo on Simian Immunodeficiency Virus C8-Nef Function

Silke Carl,1 A. John Iafrate,2 Jacek Skowronski,2 Christiane Stahl-Hennig,3 and Frank Kirchhoff1,*

Institute for Clinical and Molecular Virology, University of Erlangen-Nuernberg, 91054 Erlangen,1 and German Primate Center, 37077 Göttingen,3 Germany, and Cold Spring Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 117242

Received 13 October 1998/Accepted 3 January 1999

The simian immunodeficiency virus macC8 (SIVmacC8) variant has been used in a European Community Concerted Action project to study the efficacy and safety of live attenuated SIV vaccines in a large number of macaques. The attenuating deletion in the SIVmacC8 nef-long terminal repeat region encompasses only 12 bp and is "repaired" in a subset of infected animals. It is unknown whether C8-Nef retains some activity. Since it seems important to use only well-characterized deletion mutants in live attenuated vaccine studies, we analyzed the relevance of the deletion, and the duplications and point mutations selected in infected macaques for Nef function in vitro. The deletion, affecting amino acids 143 to 146 (DMYL), resulted in a dramatic decrease in Nef stability and function. The initial 12-bp duplication resulted in efficient Nef expression and an intermediate phenotype in infectivity assays, but it did not significantly restore the ability of Nef to stimulate viral replication and to downmodulate CD4 and class I major histocompatibility complex cell surface expression. The additional substitutions however, which subsequently evolved in vivo, gradually restored these Nef functions. It was noteworthy that coinfection experiments in the T-lymphoid 221 cell line revealed that even SIVmac nef variants carrying the original 12-bp deletion readily outgrew an otherwise isogenic virus containing a 182-bp deletion in the nef gene. Thus, although C8-Nef is unstable and severely impaired in in vitro assays, it maintains some residual activity to stimulate viral replication.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute for Clinical and Molecular Virology, University of Erlangen-Nuernberg, Schlossgarten 4, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. Phone: 49-9131-852-6483. Fax: 49-9131-852-2101. E-mail: fkkirchh{at}viro.med.uni-erlangen.de.


Journal of Virology, April 1999, p. 2790-2797, Vol. 73, No. 4
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.



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Copyright © 1999 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.