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. 2004 Mar;10(3):282-9.
doi: 10.1038/nm992. Epub 2004 Feb 8.

HIV evolution: CTL escape mutation and reversion after transmission

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HIV evolution: CTL escape mutation and reversion after transmission

A J Leslie et al. Nat Med. 2004 Mar.

Abstract

Within-patient HIV evolution reflects the strong selection pressure driving viral escape from cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) recognition. Whether this intrapatient accumulation of escape mutations translates into HIV evolution at the population level has not been evaluated. We studied over 300 patients drawn from the B- and C-clade epidemics, focusing on human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles HLA-B57 and HLA-B5801, which are associated with long-term HIV control and are therefore likely to exert strong selection pressure on the virus. The CTL response dominating acute infection in HLA-B57/5801-positive subjects drove positive selection of an escape mutation that reverted to wild-type after transmission to HLA-B57/5801-negative individuals. A second escape mutation within the epitope, by contrast, was maintained after transmission. These data show that the process of accumulation of escape mutations within HIV is not inevitable. Complex epitope- and residue-specific selection forces, including CTL-mediated positive selection pressure and virus-mediated purifying selection, operate in tandem to shape HIV evolution at the population level.

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Comment in

  • HIV escape: there and back again.
    Altman JD, Feinberg MB. Altman JD, et al. Nat Med. 2004 Mar;10(3):229-30. doi: 10.1038/nm0304-229. Nat Med. 2004. PMID: 14991039 No abstract available.

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