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Journal of Virology, September 2002, p. 8958-8962, Vol. 76, No. 17
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.17.8958-8962.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and Mark A. Wainberg1,2*
McGill University AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute-Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1E2,1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2B42
Received 22 February 2002/ Accepted 30 May 2002
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The catalytic domains of the RTs of HIV-1 and its simian counterpart, simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), both include a highly conserved YMDD motif. This domain is common throughout the polymerase family of enzymes (26), and mutations within this region are commonly lethal. However, viruses resistant to antiretroviral nucleoside 2',3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine (3TC) harbor a single M184V substitution within the aforementioned motif (32). This same substitution in RT is associated with resistance to 3TC in the case of SIV (7).
In HIV-1, it is well documented that the M184V mutation also confers a deficit in fitness that is most apparent in primary cell lines (2). The reasons for this are multifaceted and include the fact that RT enzymes containing M184V are associated with diminished processivity (2, 3, 23, 28), diminished nucleotide primer unblocking (11), and diminished ability to initiate reverse transcription (M. Gotte, X. Wei, K. Diallo, B. Marchand, A. Schaffer, and M. A. Wainberg, 5th Int. Workshop HIV Drug Resist. Treat. Strateg., abstr. 46, 2001). These events are also modulated by intracellular deoxynucleoside triphosphate substrate availability (3).
In the aftermath of deletion mutagenesis, leading to attenuation of replication, genetic variation requires passage through the constraints of an artificially produced bottleneck. Under these conditions, the spectrum of compensatory mutations is likely to be restricted (29, 30). In this study, we demonstrate that the M184V substitution can impair the viral capacity for reversion in the context of specific deletions within the 5' leader regions of a series of attenuated SIVmac239 constructs. As well, the presence of the M184V substitution may affect the process of compensatory mutagenesis in regard to codon change.
(This work was performed by J. B. Whitney in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Ph.D. degree in the Faculty of Graduate Studies, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, 2002.)
Several of our viral deletion mutants were previously shown to display moderate reversion kinetics over serial passage (12, 13), i.e., constructs SD2, SD5, and SD6. The M184V mutation was introduced into the RTs of these constructs by site-directed mutagenesis of the pCRII vector containing 1.7 kb of the SIV RT coding region as described previously (7). The coding sequence for the recovered M184V-containing RT fragment was then inserted between the NarI and BamHI sites in the full-length wild-type (WT) and mutant SIV proviral clones. All recombinant viruses were confirmed by sequencing.
After transfection of COS-7 cells with appropriate plasmid DNA using lipofectamine (GIBCO, Burlington, Ontario, Canada), viral supernatants were recovered and the concentration of p27 antigen in these stocks was quantified with a Coulter SIV core antigen assay kit (Immunotech Inc., Westbrook, Maine) as described previously (12).
Viral replication assays. Viral inocula for each construct, equivalent to 10 ng of p27 CA antigen, were treated with DNase I and used to infect CEMx174 cells (12). RT assays were used as a surrogate for viral replication and revealed that the presence of M184V together with the various deletions in the 5' leader resulted in an additional impairment in viral replication compared to when M184V was not present. These results were observed consistently in replicate experiments, regardless of which leader mutant was studied. The impairment for each mutant virus containing M184V was further amplified by the presence of 8 µM 3TC, which further constrained viral replication by an additional 2 to 4 days (results not shown). This may have been due to additional selective pressure by 3TC to maintain the M184V mutation and prevent the outgrowth of revertant viruses.
To establish the potential for viral reversion over protracted periods, we performed serial passage or "forced evolution" of our mutant constructs using the CEMx174 cell line. Typically, aliquots of viral supernatants were taken at the observed peak of infection, and these samples were then used to infect fresh CEMx174 cells at doses equivalent to 10 ng of viral p27 antigen. During each successive passage, viruses containing deletions in leader sequences plus M184V showed delays in growth kinetics and reduced replicative capacity as assessed by RT assay (results not shown).
Subsequent PCR and sequencing analysis at each passage of these M184V-containing variants indicated that the original leader sequence deletions were retained in all instances. As well, each of the three leader mutants that encoded the M184V mutation retained this mutation over at least three consecutive passages. However, both SD5-M184V and SD6-M184V lost the M184V substitution by the fourth round of passage in the absence of 3TC. This sequence alteration was commensurate with a measurable increase in viral replication (Fig. 1; only SD2-M184V and SD6-M184V are shown). In contrast, the SD2-M184V variant retained M184V through at least four passages. The last variant also showed decreased RT activity and replication rates in comparison to either the SD5 or SD6 mutant at the same passage (only SD2-M184V and SD6-M184V are shown). A similar number of clones from experiments performed under the pressure of 3TC were also sequenced and showed no loss of either the leader or M184V in four passages. As well, we carried out equivalent experiments with only the leader mutations under 3TC pressure, and these cultures showed undetectable levels of viral replication during 2 months of passage as assessed by RT assay.
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FIG. 1. Delay of phenotypic reversion of the SD2-M184V mutant after long-term culture in CEMx174 cells. Shown are growth curves of viruses over extended culture. Note that the scale of the ordinate is logarithmic. Equivalent amounts of virus from transfected COS-7 cells were used to infect CEMx174 cells based on levels of p27 antigen (10 ng per 106 cells). Infected cells were grown over protracted periods, and culture fluids were monitored by RT assay. Mock infection denotes exposure of cells to heat-inactivated WT virus as a negative control. A representative example of the SD2-M184V and SD6-M184V variants at the fourth passage is shown (the experiment was performed three times with similar results).
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FIG. 2. Replication capacity of wild-type and mutated viruses in monkey PBMCs. Equivalent amounts of virus were used to infect rhesus macaque PBMCs based on levels of p27 antigen, typically 10 ng of WT or mutant virus per 4 x 106 PBMCs. Viral replication was monitored by determining levels of SIV p27 antigen by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of culture fluids. Mock infection denotes exposure of cells to heat-inactivated wild-type virus as a negative control. The dotted line representing 0.01 ng of p27/ml indicates the threshold sensitivity of the assay. (A) Growth curves indicating antigen production in PBMCs from donor monkey A. (B) Growth curves for PBMCs from donor monkey B. p27 antigen results are the averages of duplicates. (C) Second passage of mutated viruses in 106 CEMx174 cells by using an inoculum of 10 pg of p27 antigen derived from the infected PBMCs of monkey B. Viral replication was monitored by RT assay of culture fluids. Shown is a representative replication curve of experiments conducted in duplicate. Mock infection denotes exposure of cells to heat-inactivated WT virus as a negative control. Note that the scales of the ordinates are logarithmic.
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We also used viral supernatants collected at the peak of the first passage in monkey PBMCs, again from donor B, to infect fresh CEMx174 cells. The results show that increased viral replication occurred in variants that lacked the M184V mutation (Fig. 2C). In contrast, replication in M184V-harboring species showed only minor increases compared to replication of clonal infectious stock.
RNA dimerization. We also assessed the ability of the SD2 mutant virus to properly incorporate a mature RNA dimer. Nondenaturing Northern analysis of purified RNA preparations had indicated that deletion of the sequence between nucleotides +398 and +418 in SD2 completely eliminated viral RNA dimerization. The additional presence of the M184V mutation together with the leader mutation did not appear to outwardly affect RNA dimerization (unpublished data).
Those viruses that were continually passaged in the CEMx174 cell line were sequenced by PCR amplification of proviral DNA recovered from cells isolated at the peak of the fourth round of infection. The sequencing of the complete SD2-M184V untranslated region (UTR) and gag regions showed numerous point mutations in all clones. Despite this variability, one point mutation that corresponded to a G-to-A transition in MA, encoding a change from a threonine to isoleucine at residue 70 (T70I), was found in all six sequenced clones.
To assess the relevance of this mutation, site-directed mutagenesis was performed with the SD2-M184V clone to produce the variant termed SD2-MA-M184V. Infectious inocula were produced in COS-7 cells and were then used to infect CEMx174 cells in parallel with controls, which included two previously described SD2 reversion mutants (12, 14). The compensatory mutations that restored the SD2 virus to replication competence had been shown to be members of two distinct sets of mutations within the putative dimerization initiation site (DIS) loop (A423G) and within several different Gag proteins, i.e., NC (E18G and G31K) or CA (K197R) and p6 (E49K). These amino acid changes are responsible for restoration of viral RNA packaging and viral fitness (14). A similar situation has been observed for deletions within the SL1 region of HIV-1 (20).
Figure 3A also shows that the T70I mutation in MA was sufficient to confer a replicative advantage in the context of SD2-M184V. This codon change had no observable effect on a WT virus (not shown). MA is known to be involved in the targeting of both Gag and genomic RNA to the cell membrane and in the formation and stabilization of genomic RNA dimers (6, 9). The potential role of the T70I MA mutation in the rescue of viral replication is also suggested by recent studies on a role for upstream leader sequences and the MA coding sequence in formation of an extended RNA pseudoknot structure. Extended interactions involving a region of MA and the pol open reading frame have also been reported (24, 27). Additional in vitro evidence also supports a role for higher-order structures in the regulation of viral replication (16).
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FIG. 3. (A) Reversion of the SD2-M184V variant after replication in CEMx174 cells. Growth curves of reverted viruses in CEMx174 cells. Equivalent amounts of virus from transfected COS-7 cells were used to infect CEMx174cells based on levels of p27 antigen (10 ng per 106 cells). Viral replication was monitored by RT assay of culture fluids. Shown is a representative growth curve of experiments conducted in triplicate. Mock infection denotes exposure of cells to heat-inactivated WT virus as a negative control. (B) The M184V mutation restricts compensatory mutagenesis in the case of the SD2 variant. Viruses derived from COS-7 cells were standardized on the basis of p27 CA antigen and used to infect 106 CEMx174 cells. RT activity of culture fluids was used to monitor replication. Shown is a representative growth curve of experiments performed in triplicate. Mock infection denotes exposure of cells to heat-inactivated WT virus as a negative control. Note that the scales of the ordinates are logarithmic in both panels.
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In summary, the M184V mutation in RT adversely impacts the replicative fitness of a number of SIV constructs. Furthermore, SIVs containing both the M184V and DIS mutations are less able to effect repair through compensatory mutagenesis than are viruses containing a WT RT. Our results also show that viral species that harbored both the M184V mutation and deletions in the region of the DIS displayed reduced replication capacity over multiple passages. Similar results have been reported with HIV-1 viruses containing the M184V mutation in RT (17, 19). In nonhuman primate studies, M184V-containing SIV failed to revert to WT and may have been initially impaired in its ability to multiply to high titer. However, this replication deficit may have been corrected over time, as a consequence of a distinct compensatory mutation within RT (22).
We should point out that attenuation of the SD2-M184V variant may be partly attributable to synergy between the 5' UTR and the Gag-Pol region in regard to both structure and function. HIV-1 RTs that harbor M184V suffer from diminished ability to initiate reverse transcription and to participate in the elongation phase of minus-strand DNA synthesis (5, 18). In addition, the UTRs of both HIV and SIV play key roles in RNA dimerization and strand transfer (1, 4, 18).
Finally, we have shown that both RT and UTR sequences are necessary for restoration of viral replication, and our experiments suggest that viral recombination is involved in the process of compensatory mutagenesis. Mutants that are presumed to lack this function in the process of reversion might be relegated to fixing adventitious mutations in an iterative fashion, likely imparting delays to restoration of a WT replication phenotype.
This research was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and by the Canadian Network for Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics for Cancer and Chronic Viral Diseases. J.B.W. was supported by a fellowship from The Canadian Institutes for Health Research.
Present address: Division of Clinical Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8. ![]()
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