Title: Analysis of HIV Evolution
1Analysis of HIV Evolution
- Bobak Seddighzadeh
- and
- Kristoffer Chin
- Department of Biology
- Loyola Marymount University
- Bio 398-01
- February 23, 2010
2Outline
- Background
- Question
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- References
3Function of the HIV Virus
- HIV is a retrovirus that affects immune cells,
specifically T cells. - Retroviruses contain reverse transcriptase also
known as RNA-dependent DNA polymerase. - Reverse transcriptase synthesizes single stranded
RNA into a c-DNA molecule. - Since viruses cannot synthesize their own
proteins, they require a host cell to carry out
its replication process. - HIV infects the host cell. It then injects its
genome from its capsid and uses reverse
transcriptase to create a c-DNA template that it
then incorperates into the host cells DNA. The
host cell transcribes and translates proteins
that assemble into more copies of the virus. - Virus can have either the lytic or lysogenic life
cycle
4Markham Study of HIV Virus
- Evolution is the change in the allele frequency
in a population over a period of time - More specific to HIV, the population refers to
all the HIV viruses in an affected individual,
and the allele refers to each variant of the HIV
env gene. - Different individuals in the population vary in
heritable traits that can be passed onto
offspring that may or may not give them a
selective advantage. - Markham et al. (1998) Study
- Nucleotide sequences of the env region were used
to study evolution - The viruses were classified into groups according
to rate of CD4 T cell decline progressors and
non-progressors - Progressors had increased rates of diversity and
divergence in comparison to non-progressors and
ultimately higher rates of CD4 T cell decline. - We wanted to know why a disparity exists in the
rate of evolution amongst variants
5Differences in Nucletide Sequences?
- More specifically our question was what is or
are the nucleotide sequences in the env region of
the V3 domain that are responsible for the
increased genetic diversity, divergence, and rate
of CD4 T cell decline amongst rapid progressors
and non-progressors - My partner and I predict that the increased rate
of CD4 decline, genetic divergence and diversity
are directly related to two possible mechanism
A) HIV-1 variants termed rapid progressors
selected for a structural mechanism that does not
protect the genetic material against mutations as
effectively B) or HIV-1 variants termed rapid
progressors selected for a mechanism that induces
mutations on its own DNA. We also predict that
both these mechanism are related to nucleotide
differences found in the env region of the V3
domain.
6Methods Selection of Subjects, ClustalW,
ClustDist, Counting Nucleotide Differences
- Selection
- Subjects and visits highest rate of CD4 T Cell
decline - Clones Largest Max distance, for more variation
- ClustalW
- Analysis and comparison of S
- Analysis and comparison of Unrooted trees of
subjects - ClustDist
- Analysis of Max Distance of Nucleotide sequence
differences - Counting nucleotide differences
- Analysis of specific nucleotide differences from
Non and Rapid Progressors using Excel
7ResultsNon and Rapid Progressors Subjects,
Visits, and Clone Selection
Non Progressors Subject Visit Clones Max Distance
2 1, 3, 4 (1,5) (4,5) (3,8) (3) (11) (14)
12 3, 4, 5 (1,3) (1,2) (5,6) (3) (6) (9)
13 2, 3, 5 (1,2) (3,6) (3,6) (1) (3) (4)
Rapid Progressors Subject Visit Clones Max Distance
4 2, 3, 4 (5, 13) (2,16) (1,4) (16) (14) (15)
10 4, 5, 6 (5,8) (3,10) (4,7) (13) (12) (20)
11 2, 3, 4 (1,6) (2,5) (6,8) (3) (7) (7)
8Results Unrooted tree of selected Rapid
Progressors
of Clones S Theta Min Distance Max Distance
18 100 29 4 51
9Results Unrooted tree of selected Non Progressors
of Clones S Theta Min Distance Max Distance
18 71 20 1 47
10Results Unrooted tree of selected Rapid and Non
Progressors
of Clones S Theta Min Distance Max Distance
36 142 34 1 52
11Results Samples of differences of Nucleotide
Sequence in Non and Rapid Progressors
S4V4-4 GAGGTAGTAATTAGATCTGAAAATTTCACGAACAATGCTAAAATTATAATAGTACAGCTG S4V4-4 AATAAATCTGTAGAAATTAATTGTACAAGACCCAACAACAATACAATAAGAAGGATA--- S4V4-4 CCTATAGGACCCGGCAGAGCATTTTATACAACAGG--------CAGAATAGGCAATATAAGGCAA S4V4-4 GCTCATTGTAACATTATTGAAACAAAATGGAATAACACTTTAAAACTGATAGTTGACAAA S4V4-4 TTAAGAGAACAGTTTGG-----GAATAAAACAATAATCTTTAATCAATCCTCA
S10V4-5 GAGGTAGTAATTAGATCTGAAAATTTCACGGACAATGCTAAAACCATAATAGTACAGCTG S10V4-5 AATGAATCTGTAGAAATTAATTGCACAAGACCCAACAACAATACAAGAAGAAGGATA--- S10V4-5 CATATGGGACCAGGCAGAGCATTTTATGCAACAGGAGAAATAATAGGAGATATAAGGCAA S10V4-5 GCACATTGTAACCTTAGTAGAACAAAATGGAATGACACTTTAAAACAGGTAGTTGACAAA S10V4-5 TTAAGAGAACAATTTAG-----GAATAAAACAATAATCTTTAAGCAATCCTCA
S2V1-1 GAGGTAGTAATTAGATCCGAAAATTTCACGAACAATGCTAAAATCATAATAGTACAGCTG S2V1-1 AATGAATCTGTAGAAATTAATTGTACAAGACCCAACAACAATACAAGAAAAAGTATA--- S2V1-1 CATATAGGACCAGGTAGAGCATTTTATACAACAGGAGACATAATAGGAGATATAAGACAA S2V1-1 GCATATTGTAACATTAGTAGAGCAGAATGGAATAACACTTTAAAACAGATAGTTATAAAA S2V1-1 TTGAGAGAACACTTTGG-----GAATAAAACAATAGTCTTTAATCACTCCTCA
S13V3-3 GAGATAGTAATTAGATCCGAAAATTTCACAAACAATGCTAAAATCATAATAGTACAGCTG S13V3-3 AAGGAATCTGTAGAAATTAATTGTACAAGACCTGGCAACAATACAAGAAGAAGTATA--- S13V3-3 AATATAGGACCAGGTAGAGCATTTTATGCATCAAGAGGAATAATAGGAGATATAAGACAA S13V3-3 GCATATTGTAACATCAGTAAAGCAAAATGGGATAACACTTTAGGACAGGTAGCTACAAAA S13V3-3 TTAAGAGAACAATTTAG----------GAATGCTACAATAGTCTTTAATCACTCATCA
12Past Studies in the Nucleotide Sequences in HIV
- Hill and Hernandez found a certain loop in the
gene sequence in Rapid progressors that in the
beginning of infection and showed up again in the
end. - They also found that lack of immunity shows
diverse forms, but there is a significant
domination once there is a fit form of the
disease - Found significant diversification in the
beginning of the infection and slowly lowered. - Specific Changes in the V3 region alter phenotype
that correlated to disease progression
13Past Studies in the Nucleotide Sequences in HIV
- Usage of CCR4 is related to high sequence
conservation in contrast theCXCR4 tropic viruses
that spread sequence space over larger regions. - The location of the sequences in the space can be
used toimprove the accuracy of the prediciton of
the coreceptror usage. - Bozek found that patients with high CD4 T cell
counts had highly conservessequences in
comparison to patients that had low CD4 T cell
counts.
14Interpretation of Differences found in Nucleotide
Sequences
- 10 nucleotide sequence difference were found in
the comparison of the non and rapid progressor
subjects that were chosen - These 10 differences shows that there were some
common sequences that may be necessary to the
rapid decline of T Cells that is caused by the
HIV virus - The 10 differences may not seem a lot, but the
unrooted tree of both Non and Rpaid progressors
shows a strong diversity in visits 13 and 11, 12
and 11. - The other branches of the trees shows close
relation among the other visitors which can be
interpreted that there is no significant changes
in the nucelotide sequences in non and rapid
progressors - Markham found a lot more diversity in the rapid
progressors, it is possible that the clones that
we chose was not as effective - We were more concerned with nucleotide
differences, and we did not evenconsider the
sequence space. This may provide insight as to
why thereare not significant nucleotide
differences amongst progressors
andnon-progressors yet they functionalally
different.
15Translation of Sequences and Nucleotide Spaces
- In future studies, we believe that a translation
of the nucleotide sequences will show light to
the results we found - There may be no specific change that is found in
the nucleotide sequence, but it is quite possible
with the amino acids - Hill an Hernandez found differences in the amino
acids as finding more Basic than acidic - Analyzing the Nucleotide spacing found in the V3
region as analyzed by Bozek
16References
- Borrego P, Marcelino JM, Rocha C, Doroana M,
Antunes F, Maltez F, Gomes P, Novo C, Barroso H,
and Taveira N. The role of the humoral immune
response in the molecular evolution of the
envelope C2, V3 and C3 regions in chronically
HIV-2 infected patients. Retrovirology 2008 Sep
8 5 78. - Hill MD and Hernandez W. Nucleotide and amino
acid mutations in human immunodeficiency virus
corresponding to CD4 decline. Arch Virol 2006
Jun 151(6) 1149-58. - Templeton AR, Reichert RA, Weisstein AE, Yu XF,
and Markham RB. Selection in context patterns of
natural selection in the glycoprotein 120 region
of human immunodeficiency virus 1 within infected
individuals. Genetics 2004 Aug 167(4) 1547-61. - Bozek K, Thielen A, Sierra S, Kaiser R, and
Lengauer T. V3 loop sequence space analysis
suggests different evolutionary patterns of CCR5-
and CXCR4-tropic HIV. PLoS One 2009 Oct 9 4(10)
e7387.