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J Virol, June 1998, p. 5099-5107, Vol. 72, No. 6
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Evolution of Syncytium-Inducing and Non-Syncytium-Inducing
Biological Virus Clones in Relation to Replication Kinetics during
the Course of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection
Angélique B.
van 't
Wout,1,
Hetty
Blaak,1
Leonie J.
Ran,1
Margreet
Brouwer,1
Carla
Kuiken,2 and
Hanneke
Schuitemaker1,*
Department of Clinical Viro-Immunology,
Central Laboratory of The Netherlands Red Cross Blood Transfusion
Service and Laboratory of Experimental and Clinical Immunology,
University of Amsterdam, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands,1 and
HIV Database and
Analysis Group, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New
Mexico2
Received 6 November 1997/Accepted 23 February 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
To investigate the temporal relationship between human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replicative capacity and
syncytium-inducing (SI) phenotype, biological and genetic
characteristics of longitudinally obtained virus clones from two
HIV-1-infected individuals who developed SI variants were studied. In
one individual, the emergence of rapidly replicating SI and
non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) variants was accompanied by a loss of the
slowly replicating NSI variants. In the other subject, NSI variants
were always slowly replicating, while the coexisting SI variants
showed an increase in the rate of replication. Irrespective their
replicative capacity, the NSI variants remained present throughout the
infection in both individuals. Phylogenetic analysis of the V3 region
showed early branching of the SI variants from the NSI tree. Successful
SI conversion seemed a unique event since no SI variants were found
among later-stage NSI variants. This was also confirmed by the
increasing evolutionary distance between the two subpopulations. At any
time point during the course of the infection, the variation within the
coexisting SI and NSI populations did not exceed 2%, indicating
continuous competition within each viral subpopulation.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is susceptible to genetic recombination (43) and has
an error-prone reverse transcriptase enzyme, which combined with the
absence of proofreading leads to a misincorporation rate of
10
4 to 10
5 per base, or approximately one
misincorporation per genome per replication cycle (38,
40-42). With 1010 new viruses produced each day and
a half-life of approximately 6 h (39), an HIV-1
infected-individual harbors a swarm of closely related viruses that
comprise the so-called HIV-1 quasispecies. These HIV-1 variants have
been shown to differ in biological properties such as replication rate,
cell tropism, and syncytium-inducing (SI) capacity (2, 5,
55). Virus isolated in the early asymptomatic phase of infection
is predominantly slowly replicating, macrophagetropic, and
non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) in vitro (8, 44, 48, 57, 61).
During progression to disease rapid replicating, more T-cell-tropic
viruses appear, in about 50% of infected individuals associated with
the emergence of SI variants (26, 48, 55).
Determinants which govern these biological properties have been mainly
mapped to the envelope gene (19, 37, 51), especially to the
variable (V) regions (9, 18, 20, 23, 52), although accessory
genes like nef, vif, vpr, and
vpu have also been shown to influence replication rate in
certain cell types (3, 22, 24, 46, 56). Chimeric clones,
constructed from an SI and an NSI molecular clone, showed that exchange
of the gp120 V1-V2 fragment together with the V3 fragment was
sufficient to confer SI capacity (20). Sequence analysis of
the V3 fragment of a large panel of HIV-1 isolates with distinct
biological phenotypes demonstrated the presence of positively charged
amino acids at either one or two fixed positions in the V3 loop of SI
variants (18). During the transition from NSI to SI
phenotype, the hypervariable V2 region is thought to undergo increases
both in length, mainly through insertion of potential N-linked
glycosylation sites, and charge (17, 20).
Although replicative capacity and SI phenotype in general are
coinciding biological features, their temporal relationship in the
pathway of virus phenotype evolution is not known. SI variants could
evolve from rapidly replicating NSI variants which are more likely to
accumulate the mutations required for NSI-to-SI transition. Alternatively, SI variants could also initially replicate slowly but
evolve to rapidly replicating HIV-1. When the V3 sequences of virus
populations present around the time of NSI-to-SI conversion were
analyzed, few V3 sequences intermediate between the NSI and SI variants
were detected, in agreement with the hypothesis that less fit stages
may have to be crossed in order to reach the more fit SI stage
(30).
In this study, we analyzed the temporal relationship between different
biological properties of HIV-1. We studied replication kinetics of
biologically cloned SI and NSI variants in two individuals who
developed SI variants in the course of infection. From all virus
clones, V3 sequences were determined and used for phylogenetic analyses. For comparison, viruses isolated around the time of AIDS
diagnosis from two individuals harboring only NSI variants throughout
infection were analyzed.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Study subjects.
Four participants of the Amsterdam Cohort
Studies on HIV infection and AIDS in homosexual men were
analyzed. Characteristics of the four study subjects are depicted
in Table 1. Three subjects (ACH0039,
ACH0208, and ACH0424) seroconverted in the course of the cohort
studies and progressed to AIDS within 5 years thereafter. One subject
(ACH0142) was seropositive at entry into the cohort studies and
progressed to AIDS 9 years after seropositive follow-up.
Limiting-dilution analysis.
To isolate biological virus
clones and estimate the frequency of productively infected cells,
limiting-dilution cultures were performed as described previously
(27, 48). Briefly, participant peripheral blood mononuclear
cells (PBMC; 0.5 × 104 to 4 × 104
cells per well; 24 to 96 replicates per concentration) were
cocultivated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated healthy donor
PBMC (105 per well) in 96-well microtiter plates. Every
week for 5 weeks, 65 µl of each culture supernatant was collected for
detection of p24 antigen by an in-house p24 antigen capture
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). At the same time, half of
the cells were transferred to new 96-well plates, and 105
fresh PHA-stimulated healthy donor PBMC were added to propagate the
culture. The proportion of productively infected CD4+ T
cells was estimated by the formula for Poisson distribution: F =
1n (F0), in which
F0 is the fraction of negative cultures. PBMC
from wells tested positive were transferred to 25-ml culture flasks
containing 5 × 106 fresh PHA-stimulated PBMC in 5 ml
of culture medium to grow virus stocks. All viruses obtained from one
individual were grown on target PBMC from one seronegative blood donor.
Virus containing cell-free culture supernatant was stored at
70°C
until further use, cells were frozen, and approximately 106
cells were used for isolation of DNA. SI capacity of virus clones was
determined by cocultivation with MT-2 cells (28).
In vitro characterization of virus replication rate.
Target
PBMC from the same seronegative healthy CCR5 homozygous wild-type blood
donor (determined as described previously [11]) were
used in all replication experiments. All viruses obtained from one
individual were analyzed within the same experiment. The titer of the
virus stocks was quantified by determination of the 50% tissue culture
infectious dose (TCID50) in PHA-stimulated healthy donor
PBMC. From each virus clone, 102 and 103
TCID50 were added to 5 × 106 2-day
PHA-stimulated PBMC derived from the same blood donor on which the
titer was determined. Cells were incubated for 2 h at 37°C in a
shaking water bath in 15-ml conical tubes in a 1.5-ml volume. PBMC were
then washed twice, resuspended in 5 ml of culture medium containing
recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2; 20 U/ml; Proleukin; Chiron Benelux
B.V.), and cultured for 14 days in a 25-ml culture flask. After 5, 8, and 11 days, approximately 3 × 106 fresh stimulated
target cells were added in 3 to 4 ml of culture medium containing rIL-2
(30 U/ml). Samples (75 µl) for determination of p24 production were
harvested every day after infection for 14 days and stored at
70°C.
All samples obtained for virus clones from one individual were tested
for p24 production at the same time, using an in-house p24 ELISA.
Cultures were considered positive for virus production when p24 antigen
levels exceeded background twofold, which equaled 31 ng of p24/ml. p24
production per milliliter of supernatant was determined and corrected
for the differences in volume of culture supernatants between the
moments of sampling. Due to the relatively high detection limit of our
p24 ELISA, the very early replication kinetics are not measured.
DNA isolation, PCR, and sequencing.
Total DNA from PBMC
harboring the biological HIV-1 clones was isolated as described
previously (4). Envelope V3 sequences from subject ACH0208
were amplified by PCR as described previously (53). PCR
products were purified with a Geneclean kit (Bio 101, Inc., Vista,
Calif.) and sequenced directly by the dideoxy-chain termination method
with Sequenase (U.S. Biochemical, Cleveland, Ohio), both as instructed
by the manufacturers.
Envelope V3 sequences from subject ACH0039 were amplified by PCR using
primers Seq1 (5'-TACATAATGTTTGGGCCACACATGCC-3', nucleotide
positions 6417 to 6443, sense) and Seq2
(5'-TCCTTCATATCTCCTCCTCCAGGTC-3',
positions 7629 to 7653, antisense) in the presence of 3 mM MgCl
2 in the first
reaction and primers Seq5 (5'-GTCAACTCAACTGCTGTTAAATGGC-3',
positions 6988 to 7012, sense) and Seq6
(5'-ATCTAATTTGTCCACTGATGGGAGG-3',
positions 7532 to 7556, antisense) in the presence of 3 mM MgCl
2 in the nested
reaction. For amplification, the following PCR amplification
cycles
were used: 5 min at 95°C once; 1.5 min at 95°C, 1 min at
55°C,
and 1 min at 72°C, repeated 25 times; followed by a 5-min
extension
at 72°C and subsequent cooling to 4°C. Nested PCR products
were
purified with QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen, Hilden,
Germany).
Dye terminator cycle sequencing with AmpliTaq DNA polymerase
(Perkin-Elmer, Applied Biosystems Division, Foster City, Calif.)
was
performed with the following amplification cycles: 30 s at
92°C,
15 s at 50°C, and 4 min at 60°C, repeated 25 times with
the
sense nested PCR primer Seq5. Sequence analysis was performed
on ABI
373S automated sequencer according to the manufacturer's
protocol.
Phylogenetic and sequence data analysis.
Alignment of the
sequences was straightforward and done with the PILEUP program, checked
manually and keeping codons intact. Phylogenetic analyses were done
with the neighbor-joining program (45) as implemented in the
PHYLIP package (15). Bootstrap resampling was used to assess
the strength of support for each branch of the phylogenetic trees
(14). For bootstrapping, the SEQBOOT, DNADIST, and CONSENSE
programs from this package were used. PHYLIP's DRAWTREE program was
used to produce the plots. For direct comparison of nucleotide
sequences, the number of mismatches as a proportion of sequence length
(Hamming distance) was used (21). The distance matrix input
for the neighbor-joining analysis was generated by using Kimura's
two-parameter estimation for nucleotides (25). Estimation of
the number of silent and nonsilent substitutions was done according to
Nei and Gojobori's method (36) as implemented in MEGA
(31). In the statistical analysis of the data, to avoid the
problem of dependence between data points, instead of the commonly used
pairwise Hamming distance between clones [which results in
n(n
1)/2 data points for n
sequences], we calculated the distance between all clones and their
consensus sequence, which results in n data points for
n sequences, thus evading the problem of correlated
observations. The significance of differences between the variation of
groups of clones was evaluated by using the t test.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
All newly
generated sequences have been deposited in GenBank under the following
accession numbers: for ACH0039, AF022257 to AF022302; for
ACH0208, AF021477, AF021478,
AF021494, AF021495, AF021499, AF0214503, AF021505, AF021508, AF021510,
AF021513, AF021514, AF021516, AF021517, AF021518, AF021521, AF021522,
AF021523, AF021524, AF021532, AF021533, AF021536, AF021537, AF021540, AF021542, AF021607, AF021608, AF021610, AF021611, AF021612, AF021613,
AF021614, AF021616, AF021617, AF021618, AF021620, AF021622, AF021646,
AF021647, AF021650, AF021651, and AF021652.
 |
RESULTS |
Replicative capacity of longitudinally obtained biological virus
clones.
From two participants (ACH0039 and ACH0208) from the
Amsterdam cohort, biological HIV-1 clones were isolated at several time points between seroconversion and AIDS diagnosis. Individual clones were compared for SI/NSI phenotype and analyzed for replication kinetics. It is important to note that not all virus clones detected in
the limiting-dilution experiment were used in the replication experiments, but only a random sample of 6 to 10 virus clones from each
time point. The NSI clones detected in the 17 months sample from
subject ACH0039 were lost due to technical difficulties. In each
experiment, the viral replication kinetics after infections with 100 TCID50 confirmed the observations after infection with 1,000 TCID50 (data not shown). Therefore, only the results
for the inoculation with 1,000 TCID50 are shown in the
figures. Four slowly replicating NSI variants were isolated 10 months
after seroconversion of subject ACH0039, but the majority of the
isolated NSI virus clones already had rapid replication
kinetics (Fig. 1, top left
panels). The first and rapidly replicating, SI variants were
obtained 17 months after seroconversion. Throughout follow-up, coexisting SI and NSI variants that had similar rapid replication kinetics were isolated (Fig. 1, top right panels).

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FIG. 1.
Replication kinetics of SI ( ) and NSI ( ) HIV-1
clones during the course of HIV-1 infection in two subjects harboring
both SI and NSI virus variants. From each virus clone, 103
TCID50 was added to 5 × 106 2-day
PHA-stimulated PBMC derived from the same donor on which the titer was
determined. After 5, 8, and 11 days, approximately 3 × 106 fresh stimulated target cells were added. Samples (75 µl) for determination of p24 production were harvested every day
after infection for 14 days. Each line represents the results obtained
for one virus clone; indicates NSI clone 12B3 with arginines at
positions 10 and 25. AIDS diagnosis for ACH0039 and ACH0208 was at 37 and 54 months respectively, postseroconversion (post sc.).
|
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In both the early and late phases of infection, different replication
patterns were observed in subject ACH0208 (Fig.
1, bottom
panels).
During the first 9 months after seroconversion of subject
ACH0208, only
slowly replicating NSI viruses were obtained (Fig.
1, bottom left
panels). After 15 months the first, slowly replicating
SI variants were
detected; these were replaced within 4 months
by rapidly replicating SI
variants. The SI variants obtained from
ACH0208 gained increasing
replication kinetics over time, while
the coexisting NSI variants
maintained slow replication kinetics
(Fig.
1, bottom right panels). At
the time of AIDS diagnosis,
faster-replicating NSI variants were
isolated, although replication
was still markedly slower than that of
the coexisting SI variants.
The viruses isolated around the time of AIDS diagnosis from these two
patients were compared with those obtained from two
individuals
harboring only NSI variants throughout infection,
ACH0142 and ACH0424.
In general, viruses obtained from all four
individuals had rapid
replication kinetics around the time of
AIDS diagnosis, irrespective of
the presence of SI variants (Fig.
2).

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FIG. 2.
Replication kinetics of SI ( ) and NSI ( ) HIV-1
clones in four subjects at the time of AIDS diagnosis. From each virus
clone, 103 TCID50 was added to 5 × 106 2-day PHA-stimulated PBMC derived from the same donor
on which the titer was determined. After 5, 8, and 11 days,
approximately 3 × 106 fresh stimulated target cells
were added. Samples (75 µl) for determination of p24 production were
harvested every day after infection for 14 days. Means and standard
errors of the results for four to five virus clones per phenotype are
shown.
|
|
Contribution of phenotypically different HIV-1 clones to virus
load.
To analyze the significance of slowly replicating coexisting
NSI variants, we calculated the contribution of NSI and SI virus clones
to the total cellular infectious load in the limiting-dilution analysis. For each time point analyzed, the contributions of SI and NSI
HIV-1 variants to the total infectious cellular load are shown in Fig.
3. SI variants were first detected 17 and
15 months after seroconversion in ACH0039 and ACH0208, respectively.
The equally rapidly replicating coexisting SI and NSI variants in subject ACH0039 contributed equally to the infectious cellular load
(Fig. 3, top left). However, also in subject ACH0208 the NSI variants
constituted 50% of the total virus population throughout follow-up
despite their slow replication rates (Fig. 3, top right). The two
NSI-harboring individuals, ACH0142 and ACH0424, also showed a gradual
load increase over time, reaching viral loads similar to the two SI-
and NSI-harboring individuals around the moment of AIDS diagnosis.

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FIG. 3.
Changes in infectious cellular SI ( ) and NSI ( )
HIV-1 load in relation to time after seroconversion or seropositive
entry. The frequency of cells productively infected with NSI or SI
variants was determined by limiting-dilution analysis of patient PBMC
on PHA-stimulated target cells.
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Phylogenetic analysis.
To understand the phylogenetic
relationship between the coexisting SI and NSI variants in the two
SI-harboring subjects, a region encompassing the V3 domain of the gp120
envelope molecule was sequenced, 330 nucleotides for ACH0039 and 195 nucleotides for ACH0208. When comparing the deduced 65 amino acids
sequenced for both subjects, the V3 sequences were distinct, grouping
separately into two groups, with a mean Hamming distance between the
two groups of 15%. Bootstrap resampling supported the distinction of
two separate groups, 100 of 100 bootstraps. The deduced amino acid
sequences for the two subjects are shown in Fig.
4.

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FIG. 4.
Deduced amino acid sequences of the V3 region. The
sequences are aligned with the consensus sequence of the variants
present in the first sample for each patient. Amino acid positions
involved in SI capacity are marked ( ). Dashes indicate identity with
the reference sequence. , silent
mutation compared with reference sequence. (A) Alignment of V3
sequences from virus clones obtained during the course of infection of
participant ACH0039. Position 1 corresponds to amino acid 268 of the
HXB2 envelope protein. (B) Alignment of V3 sequences from virus clones
obtained during the course of infection of participant ACH0208.
Position 1 corresponds to amino acid 296 of the HXB2 envelope
protein.
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The mean synonymous substitution rate (
dS) in
the V3 region was 0.025 (±0.015) for ACH0039 and 0.032 (±0.030) for
ACH0208
over 27 and 40 months of follow-up, respectively. The mean
rates
of nonsynonymous substitution (
dN) were
0.036 (±0.018) and 0.040
(±0.023), respectively, which in both cases
seems higher than
the rate of synonymous substitutions but not
significantly different
due to the large standard deviations. When
comparing
dS and
dN for
each time point separately, only at the last time point (37
months) for
subject ACH0039 did we observe a significant difference
(Student's
t test,
P = 0.0040). Figure
5 shows the changes in
dS and
dN detected during
follow-up. Variants in subject ACH0039
had a stable rate of synonymous
substitutions (time effect analysis
of covariance [ANCOVA],
P = 0.2227), whereas the rate of nonsynonymous
substitutions increased sharply during follow-up (
P < 0.0001),
resulting in a decreasing
dS/dN ratio. In subject ACH0208,
both
the rate of silent substitutions and the rate of nonsynonymous
substitutions increased over time (time effect,
P = 0.005 and
P < 0.0001, respectively).

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FIG. 5.
Plots of synonymous (dS) and
nonsynonymous (dN) substitution rates in the V3
region of the virus clones obtained in the course of HIV-1 infection
from two subjects, ACH0039 (A) and ACH0208 (B). Estimation of the
number of silent and nonsilent substitutions between all sequences from
one time point and the consensus sequence of that time point was done
according to Nei and Gojobori's method (36) as implemented
in MEGA (31). Numbers of synonymous ( ) and nonsynonymous
( ) substitutions from the same time point are shown. *,
P = 0.0040.
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Early after seroconversion both subjects harbored a rather homogeneous
group of NSI V3 sequences (mean Hamming distances of
1.2 and 0.8%,
respectively). For both individuals, the first SI
variants isolated
were different from the coexisting NSI variants
located at least 4 amino acid positions of the 35 amino acids
in the V3 loop (mean Hamming
distances were 3.8 and 3.9%, respectively
at the first time point of
detection of SI variants) (Fig.
4).
To strengthen this observation,
neighbor-joining trees with bootstrap
resampling were constructed (Fig.
6). Indeed, in both patients
the SI and
NSI variants from all time points were separated but
not with very high
bootstrap values (92 and 72%, respectively).
Total Hamming distances
between the variants present at each time
point increased over time in
both patients (Fig.
7). Variation
within
each phenotypic group at each time point was relatively
stable (mean
Hamming distance of approximately 1.5%). However,
the evolutionary
distance between the two groups of variants increased
steadily over
time (mean Hamming distances were 6.7 and 7.0%,
respectively, at the
last time point available). Accordingly,
Hamming distances were 3.2 and
4.9% between the late NSI variants
and the early NSI variants
respectively, and were 3.9 and 4.5%
between the late SI and the early
SI variants, respectively, for
both patients. To test if the course of
the variation over time
differs between SI and NSI variants, an
analysis of covariance
was done with the variation (distance of each
clone to the consensus)
as the dependent variable, the time since
seroconversion as a
continuous and SI/NSI as a dichotomous predictor.
The time effect
was significant in both patients for the comparison
between SI
sequences and NSI consensus or between NSI sequences and SI
consensus
(ACH0039,
P = 0.0009 and
P = 0.0001, respectively; ACH0208,
P < 0.0001 and
P < 0.0001 respectively), but only in patient ACH0208
was a significant interaction effect observed, indicating that
the NSI
and SI variation developed differently over time (ACH0039,
NSI
P = 0.5760 and SI
P = 0.6952; ACH0208,
NSI
P = 0.0001 and
SI
P = 0.0009).

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FIG. 6.
Results of phylogenetic analysis of the V3 region
(neighbor-joining method, unrooted tree) from virus clones obtained
during the course of infection of participants ACH0039 and ACH0208.
Bootstrap values indicate the percentages of trees showing the observed
specific groupings. Filled symbols, SI sequences; open symbols, NSI
sequences.
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FIG. 7.
Plots of Hamming distances for the V3 region between the
virus clones obtained in the course of HIV-1 infection from two
subjects, ACH0039 (A) and ACH0208 (B). Distances were calculated by
using DNADIST as implemented in the PHYLIP program. Comparisons between
NSI variants, between SI variants, and between SI and NSI variants from
the same time point are shown.
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One of the NSI variants (12B3) isolated 15 months after seroconversion
from subject ACH0208 had arginines at positions 10
and 25, two amino
acids positions that are positively charged
in the coexisting SI
variants but not in the other NSI variants
(Fig.
4). Interestingly,
this NSI variant had the highest replication
kinetics of the NSI
variants present at that time point (Fig.
1, second bottom panel, line
marked with

). The NSI variants
present in this individual at 46 months after seroconversion had
certain amino acid changes that were
only detected in SI variants
before that time (for example, the lysines
at positions 32 and
47, the isoleucine at position 37, and the
glutamine at position
41) (Fig.
4). When the four NSI variants were
omitted from the
data set the bootstrap value separating the SI and NSI
branches
of the phylogenetic tree increased from 72 to 91% (data not
shown).
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study, we analyzed the temporal relationship between
changes in virus replication characteristics and the evolution of SI
and NSI virus populations during the natural course of HIV disease.
Interestingly, rapidly replicating SI virus clones had emerged more
than 3 years before AIDS diagnosis in two individuals (7).
After the emergence of, and compared to, SI variants, the coexisting
NSI variants had slower replication kinetics in one subject and similar
replication kinetics in the other. The similar replication kinetics of
the coexisting SI and NSI variants with very different V3 regions in
this latter subject again illustrate that regions other than V3 are
important for replication rate (19, 20).
When SI variants are present in patient PBMC, they always outgrow the
coexisting NSI variants in in vitro bulk coculture of the patient PBMC
with PHA-stimulated target PBMC (unpublished observations). In vivo,
however, irrespective their replicative capacity, NSI and SI HIV-1
clones each constituted 50% of the total infectious cellular load, in
agreement with our previous observations (27, 48). The
selective growth advantage for SI HIV-1 as observed in vitro is
apparently not present in vivo. It is possible that the NSI variants
detected in the periphery originate solely from compartments where
virus production from macrophages predominates. Most primary SI
variants are not able to infect macrophages in vitro (49),
probably because their entry depends on much higher concentrations of
CD4 on the cell surface than is expressed on macrophages
(29). Therefore, it seems likely that virus production from
macrophage compartments is predominantly of the NSI phenotype. The SI
variants are apparently unable to compete with the direct spread of NSI
variants from the macrophages to CD4+ T cells which may
occur during the close cell-to-cell contact during antigen
presentation.
Alternatively, the persistence of slowly replicating NSI variants may
be explained by the existence of different target T-cell populations
for NSI and SI variants. Recently, several members of the CC and CXC
chemokine receptor families have been shown to function as the
coreceptors for HIV entry. NSI variants primarily use the
-chemokine
receptor CCR5, while primary SI variants were shown in vitro to use
both CCR5 and the
-chemokine receptor CXCR4 (1, 6, 10, 12, 13,
16, 54, 60). The equal contribution to the infectious cellular
load indicates the ability of the slow NSI variants to compete with the
more rapid SI variants for the same CCR5-expressing targets. This may
be mediated by increased affinity for the CCR5 and/or CD4 receptor,
allowing replication in cells with lower expression of these molecules.
Interestingly, the subject that harbored rapid SI and slow NSI variants
was heterozygous for the 32-bp deletion (
32) in the CCR5 gene
(32, 47). It is likely that the NSI viruses in this individual have adapted to entry of target cells expressing lower levels of CCR5, for example, by using other coreceptors or developing higher affinity for CCR5 itself. Indeed, we have recently found evidence for adaptation of viruses from CCR5
32 heterozygous individuals for growth in cells from CCR5
32 heterozygous blood donors (3a). As the NSI virus variants from subject ACH0208 have slower replication kinetics than the NSI variants from subject ACH0039, this adaptation may be associated with decreased replication kinetics.
The fact that the evolutionary distance between coexisting NSI and SI
populations increases over time may indeed indicate that in general
there is only little interaction between these two compartments of
HIV-1 replication. The two compartments evolved away from the common
ancestral sequence with no sign of saturation, which may indicate that
SI variants are newly generated in an individual rather than
transmitted together with the NSI variant, as the latter scenario would
result in two highly distinct coexisting SI and NSI populations already
at the very first time point of detection of SI variants, of which we
find no evidence in these patients or in several other cohort
participants studied for this phenomenon (data not shown). Only in one
case, where SI variants were detected immediately after infection of a
new individual, did we find coexisting SI and NSI populations that were
more than 5% apart, reflecting transmission of both coexisting
variants from the donor (57).
After the first emergence of the SI variants in both subjects, no new
SI variants generated from late NSI variants were detected. Once SI
variants are present, it may be more difficult for newly arising switch
variants to compete. Alternatively, there may only be a certain type of
NSI variants from which SI variants can be generated. When this stage
in the evolution of NSI variants has been passed, no new SI variants
will emerge or the new SI variants may not be able to compete with the
late NSI variants. Indeed, at the time of AIDS diagnosis, high virus
loads and rapid virus replication kinetics were found in all
individuals, including the two individuals harboring only NSI variants
throughout the course of infection. Apparently, the presence of rapid
NSI variants was sufficient to establish progression to AIDS without
the generation of SI variants. Possibly, these late rapid NSI variants
were as cytopathic as the late rapid SI variants in the other two
individuals (50). Subject ACH0039, however, harbored rapid
NSI variants 10 months after seroconversion. Still, in this subject SI
variants emerged. This may suggest that the increased target cell
repertoire of SI variants in some individuals provides enough selective
growth advantage for SI variants to emerge in the presence of rapidly replicating NSI variants.
In both subjects, the coexisting SI and NSI populations each are
surprisingly homogeneous throughout the study period. In subject
ACH0039, the average Hamming distance rarely exceeded 2%, and in
subject ACH0208 only after more than 30 months of infection did the
average Hamming distance per phenotype reach the 5% level. The
homogeneity per phenotypic population may indicate fierce competition
within the NSI and SI HIV-1 populations, where only the fittest variant
in both groups evolves further, generating the new virus population
detected at the next time point. The possible recombination observed in
subject ACH0208 suggests, however, that interaction between the
coexisting SI and NSI variants may occur, which would imply at least
some overlap of target cell populations, in agreement with the reported
CCR5 usage of primary SI variants (54). Despite the
homogeneity of each phenotypic virus population at a particular time
point, there is a continued evolution toward new variants reflected in
the increasing Hamming distance between the NSI and SI virus
populations and between each population and the populations present at
earlier time points.
Overall, sequence variation increased with time in the two subjects,
due to increases in both the number of synonymous and nonsynonymous
substitutions in ACH0208 and due to increases in the number of
nonsynonymous substitutions only in ACH0039. Nonsynonymous virus
variation in both p17 and V3 has been shown to be correlated with
immune selective pressures (33-35, 53, 58, 59). The HIV-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte reactivity against autologous virus
epitopes in the V3 region in these two subjects is currently under
study.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This study was performed as part of the Amsterdam Cohort Studies
on HIV infection and AIDS, a collaboration between the Municipal Health
Service, The Academic Medical Centre, and the Central Laboratory of the
Netherlands Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands. Proleukin (rIL-2) was kindly provided by R. Rombouts, Chiron Benelux B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands. We are greatly indebted to all cohort participants for their continuous participation, to Marijke Roos and colleagues for excellent technical assistance, to
Ana-Maria de Roda-Husman for providing data on CCR5 genotype, to
Catherine Macken, Andrew Leigh-Brown, and David Krakauer for discussions and advice, and to Frank van Engelenburg, Maarten Koot, and
Frank Miedema for critical reading of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Clinical Viro-Immunology, Central Laboratory of The Netherlands Red
Cross Blood Transfusion Service, Plesmanlaan 125, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Phone: 31 20 512 3317. Fax: 31 20 512 3310. E-mail: J_Schuitemaker{at}CLB.nl.
Present address: Department of Microbiology, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-7740.
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