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A de novo approach to inferring within-host fitness effects during untreated HIV-1 infection

A de novo approach to inferring within-host fitness effects during untreated HIV-1 infection

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dc.contributor.author Christopher J. R. Illingworth
dc.contributor.author Jayna Raghwani
dc.contributor.author David Serwadda
dc.contributor.author Nelson K. Sewankambo
dc.contributor.author Merlin L. Robb
dc.contributor.author Michael A. Eller
dc.contributor.author Andrew R. Redd
dc.contributor.author Thomas C. Quinn
dc.contributor.author Katrina A. Lythgoe
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T13:51:44Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T13:51:44Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49527
dc.description.abstract In the absence of effective antiviral therapy, HIV-1 evolves in response to the within-host environment, of which the immune system is an important aspect. During the earliest stages of infection, this process of evolution is very rapid, driven by a small number of CTL escape mechanisms. As the infection progresses, immune escape variants evolve under reduced magnitudes of selection, while competition between an increasing number of polymorphic alleles (i.e., clonal interference) makes it difficult to quantify the magnitude of selection acting upon specific variant alleles. To tackle this complex problem, we developed a novel multi-locus inference method to evaluate the role of selection during the chronic stage of within-host infection. We applied this method to targeted sequence data from the p24 and gp41 regions of HIV-1 collected from 34 patients with long-term untreated HIV-1 infection. We identify a broad distribution of beneficial fitness effects during infection, with a small number of variants evolving under strong selection and very many variants evolving under weaker selection. The uniquely large number of infections analysed granted a previously unparalleled statistical power to identify loci at which selection could be inferred to act with statistical confidence. Our model makes no prior assumptions about the nature of alleles under selection, such that any synonymous or non-synonymous variant may be inferred to evolve under selection. However, the majority of variants inferred with confidence to be under selection were non-synonymous in nature, and in nearly all cases were associated with either CTL escape in p24 or neutralising antibody escape in gp41. Sites inferred to be under selection in multiple hosts have high within-host and between-host diversity albeit not all sites with high between-host diversity were inferred to be under selection at the within-host level. Our identification of selection at sites associated with resistance to broadly neutralising antibodies (bNAbs) highlights the need to fully understand the role of selection in untreated individuals when designing bNAb based therapies.
dc.publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
dc.title A de novo approach to inferring within-host fitness effects during untreated HIV-1 infection
dc.type Preprint
dc.identifier.doi 10.1101/825117
dc.identifier.mag 2982351300
dc.identifier.lens 043-661-396-249-230
dc.identifier.spage 825117
dc.subject.lens-fields Small number
dc.subject.lens-fields CTL*
dc.subject.lens-fields Allele
dc.subject.lens-fields Inference
dc.subject.lens-fields Clonal interference
dc.subject.lens-fields Fitness effects
dc.subject.lens-fields Evolutionary biology
dc.subject.lens-fields Locus (genetics)
dc.subject.lens-fields Biology
dc.subject.lens-fields Immune system


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