Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Bottleneck Selects for Consensus Virus with Lower Gag-Protease-Driven Replication Capacity

Author:

Naidoo Vanessa L.1,Mann Jaclyn K.1,Noble Christie2,Adland Emily2,Carlson Jonathan M.3,Thomas Jake2,Brumme Chanson J.4,Thobakgale-Tshabalala Christina F.1,Brumme Zabrina L.45,Brockman Mark A.45ORCID,Goulder Philip J. R.12,Ndung'u Thumbi1678

Affiliation:

1. HIV Pathogenesis Programme, Doris Duke Medical Research Institute, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa

2. Department of Paediatrics, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

3. Microsoft Research, Redmond, California, USA

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

5. Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada

6. Africa Health Research Institute, Durban, South Africa

7. Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

8. Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACT In the large majority of cases, HIV infection is established by a single variant, and understanding the characteristics of successfully transmitted variants is relevant to prevention strategies. Few studies have investigated the viral determinants of mother-to-child transmission. To determine the impact of Gag-protease-driven viral replication capacity on mother-to-child transmission, the replication capacities of 148 recombinant viruses encoding plasma-derived Gag-protease from 53 nontransmitter mothers, 48 transmitter mothers, and 47 infected infants were assayed in an HIV-1-inducible green fluorescent protein reporter cell line. All study participants were infected with HIV-1 subtype C. There was no significant difference in replication capacities between the nontransmitter ( n = 53) and transmitter ( n = 44) mothers ( P = 0.48). Infant-derived Gag-protease NL4-3 recombinant viruses ( n = 41) were found to have a significantly lower Gag-protease-driven replication capacity than that of viruses derived from the mothers ( P < 0.0001 by a paired t test). High percent similarities to consensus subtype C Gag, p17, p24, and protease sequences were also found in the infants ( n = 28) in comparison to their mothers ( P = 0.07, P = 0.002, P = 0.03, and P = 0.02, respectively, as determined by a paired t test). These data suggest that of the viral quasispecies found in mothers, the HIV mother-to-child transmission bottleneck favors the transmission of consensus-like viruses with lower viral replication capacities. IMPORTANCE Understanding the characteristics of successfully transmitted HIV variants has important implications for preventative interventions. Little is known about the viral determinants of HIV mother-to-child transmission (MTCT). We addressed the role of viral replication capacity driven by Gag, a major structural protein that is a significant determinant of overall viral replicative ability and an important target of the host immune response, in the MTCT bottleneck. This study advances our understanding of the genetic bottleneck in MTCT by revealing that viruses transmitted to infants have a lower replicative ability as well as a higher similarity to the population consensus (in this case HIV subtype C) than those of their mothers. Furthermore, the observation that “consensus-like” virus sequences correspond to lower in vitro replication abilities yet appear to be preferentially transmitted suggests that viral characteristics favoring transmission are decoupled from those that enhance replicative capacity.

Funder

Victor Daitz Foundation

Wellcome Trust

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research

Canada Research Chairs

National Research Foundation

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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