[HTML][HTML] Compartmentalization of HIV-1 within the female genital tract is due to monotypic and low-diversity variants not distinct viral populations

M Bull, G Learn, I Genowati, J McKernan, J Hitti… - PloS one, 2009 - journals.plos.org
M Bull, G Learn, I Genowati, J McKernan, J Hitti, D Lockhart, K Tapia, S Holte, J Dragavon…
PloS one, 2009journals.plos.org
Background Compartmentalization of HIV-1 between the genital tract and blood was noted
in half of 57 women included in 12 studies primarily using cell-free virus. To further
understand differences between genital tract and blood viruses of women with chronic HIV-1
infection cell-free and cell-associated virus populations were sequenced from these tissues,
reasoning that integrated viral DNA includes variants archived from earlier in infection, and
provides a greater array of genotypes for comparisons. Methodology/Principal Findings …
Background
Compartmentalization of HIV-1 between the genital tract and blood was noted in half of 57 women included in 12 studies primarily using cell-free virus. To further understand differences between genital tract and blood viruses of women with chronic HIV-1 infection cell-free and cell-associated virus populations were sequenced from these tissues, reasoning that integrated viral DNA includes variants archived from earlier in infection, and provides a greater array of genotypes for comparisons.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Multiple sequences from single-genome-amplification of HIV-1 RNA and DNA from the genital tract and blood of each woman were compared in a cross-sectional study. Maximum likelihood phylogenies were evaluated for evidence of compartmentalization using four statistical tests. Genital tract and blood HIV-1 appears compartmentalized in 7/13 women by ≥2 statistical analyses. These subjects' phylograms were characterized by low diversity genital-specific viral clades interspersed between clades containing both genital and blood sequences. Many of the genital-specific clades contained monotypic HIV-1 sequences. In 2/7 women, HIV-1 populations were significantly compartmentalized across all four statistical tests; both had low diversity genital tract-only clades. Collapsing monotypic variants into a single sequence diminished the prevalence and extent of compartmentalization. Viral sequences did not demonstrate tissue-specific signature amino acid residues, differential immune selection, or co-receptor usage.
Conclusions/Significance
In women with chronic HIV-1 infection multiple identical sequences suggest proliferation of HIV-1-infected cells, and low diversity tissue-specific phylogenetic clades are consistent with bursts of viral replication. These monotypic and tissue-specific viruses provide statistical support for compartmentalization of HIV-1 between the female genital tract and blood. However, the intermingling of these clades with clades comprised of both genital and blood sequences and the absence of tissue-specific genetic features suggests compartmentalization between blood and genital tract may be due to viral replication and proliferation of infected cells, and questions whether HIV-1 in the female genital tract is distinct from blood.
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