Uncommon Pathways of Immune Escape Attenuate HIV-1 Integrase Replication Capacity

Author:

Brockman Mark A.12,Chopera Denis R.1,Olvera Alex3,Brumme Chanson J.24,Sela Jennifer5,Markle Tristan J.1,Martin Eric1,Carlson Jonathan M.6,Le Anh Q.1,McGovern Rachel2,Cheung Peter K.2,Kelleher Anthony D.7,Jessen Heiko8,Markowitz Martin9,Rosenberg Eric10,Frahm Nicole11,Sanchez Jorge12,Mallal Simon13,John Mina13,Harrigan P. Richard2,Heckerman David6,Brander Christian314,Walker Bruce D.5,Brumme Zabrina L.12

Affiliation:

1. Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada

2. British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, Canada

3. AIDS Research Institute irsiCaixa, Badalona, Spain

4. University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

5. Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

6. Microsoft Research, Los Angeles, California, USA

7. Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

8. Jessen Praxis, Berlin, Germany

9. Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center, New York, New York, USA

10. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

11. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA

12. Asociación Civil IMPACTA Salud y Educacion, Lima, Peru

13. Murdoch University, Perth, Australia

14. Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA), Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

ABSTRACTAn attenuation of the HIV-1 replication capacity (RC) has been observed for immune-mediated escape mutations in Gag restricted by protective HLA alleles. However, the extent to which escape mutations affect other viral proteins during natural infection is not well understood. We generated recombinant viruses encoding plasma HIV-1 RNA integrase sequences from antiretroviral-naïve individuals with early (n= 88) and chronic (n= 304) infections and measured thein vitroRC of each. In contrast to data from previous studies of Gag, we observed little evidence that host HLA allele expression was associated with integrase RC. A modest negative correlation was observed between the number of HLA-B-associated integrase polymorphisms and RC in chronic infection (R= −0.2;P= 0.003); however, this effect was not driven by mutations restricted by protective HLA alleles. Notably, the integrase variants S119R, G163E, and I220L, which represent uncommon polymorphisms associated with HLA-C*05, -A*33, and -B*52, respectively, correlated with lower RC (allq< 0.2). We identified a novel C*05-restricted epitope (HTDNGSNF114–121) that likely contributes to the selection of the S119R variant, the polymorphism most significantly associated with lower RC in patient sequences. An NL4-3 mutant encoding the S119R polymorphism displayed a ∼35%-reduced function that was rescued by a single compensatory mutation of A91E. Together, these data indicate that substantial HLA-driven attenuation of integrase is not a general phenomenon during HIV-1 adaptation to host immunity. However, uncommon polymorphisms selected by HLA alleles that are not conventionally regarded to be protective may be associated with impaired protein function. Vulnerable epitopes in integrase might therefore be considered for future vaccine strategies.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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