HIV-1 subtype F integrase polymorphisms external to the catalytic core domain contribute to severe loss of replication capacity in context of the integrase inhibitor resistance mutation Q148H

Author:

Aulicino Paula C12ORCID,Momin Zoha3,Rozenszajn Mijael12ORCID,Monzon Arturo3,Arazi-Caillaud Solange4,Bologna Rosa4,Mangano Andrea12,Kimata Jason T3

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Cellular Biology and Retroviruses, Unit of Virology and Molecular Epidemiology, Hospital de Pediatría “Prof. Dr. Juan P. Garrahan” , Buenos Aires , Argentina

2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) , Buenos Aires , Argentina

3. Department of Molecular Virology & Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine , Houston, TX , USA

4. Unit of Epidemiology and Infectology, Hospital de Pediatría “Prof. Dr. Juan P. Garrahan” , Buenos Aires , Argentina

Abstract

Abstract Background In prior studies, HIV-1 BF recombinants with subtype F integrases failed to develop resistance to raltegravir through the Q148H mutational pathway. We aimed to determine the role of subtype-specific polymorphisms in integrase on drug susceptibility, viral replication and integration. Methods Integrase sequences were retrieved from the Los Alamos Database or obtained from the Garrahan HIV cohort. HIV-1 infectious molecular clones with or without Q148H (+ G140S) resistance mutations were constructed using integrases of subtype B (NL4-3) or F1(BF) ARMA159 and URTR23. Integrase chimeras were generated by reciprocal exchanges of a 200 bp fragment spanning amino acids 85–150 of the catalytic core domain (CCD) of NL4-3-Q148H and either ARMA159-Q148H or URTR23-Q148H. Viral infections were quantified by p24 ELISA and Alu-gag integration PCR assay. Results At least 18 different polymorphisms distinguish subtype B from F1(BF) recombinant integrases. In phenotypic experiments, p24 at Day 15 post-infection was high (105–106 pg/mL) for WT and NL4-3-Q148H; by contrast, it was low (102–104 pg/mL) for both F1(BF)-Q148H + G140S viruses, and undetectable for the Q148H mutants. Compared with WT viruses, integrated DNA was reduced by 5-fold for NL4-3-Q148H (P = 0.05), 9-fold for URTR23-Q148H (P = 0.01) and 16000-fold for ARMA159-Q148H (P = 0.01). Reciprocal exchange between B and F1(BF) of an integrase CCD region failed to rescue the replicative defect of F1(BF) integrase mutants. Conclusions The functional impairment of Q148H in the context of subtype F integrases from BF recombinants explains the lack of selection of this pathway in vivo. Non-B polymorphisms external to the integrase CCD may influence the pathway to integrase strand transfer inhibitor resistance.

Funder

Fulbright-CONICET Scholar Award

Basic Science Core of the Texas D-CFAR

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology,Microbiology (medical)

Reference43 articles.

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