Quantifying the dynamics of viral recombination during free virus and cell-to-cell transmission in HIV-1 infection

Author:

Kreger Jesse1ORCID,Garcia Josephine2,Zhang Hongtao2,Komarova Natalia L1,Wodarz Dominik13,Levy David N2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics, Rowland Hall, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA

2. Department of Basic Science, New York University College of Dentistry, 921 Schwartz Building, 345 East 24th Street, New York, NY 10010–9403, USA

3. Department of Population Health and Disease Prevention, Program in Public Health, Susan and Henry Samueli College of Health Sciences, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA

Abstract

Abstract Recombination has been shown to contribute to human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) evolution in vivo, but the underlying dynamics are extremely complex, depending on the nature of the fitness landscapes and of epistatic interactions. A less well-studied determinant of recombinant evolution is the mode of virus transmission in the cell population. HIV-1 can spread by free virus transmission, resulting largely in singly infected cells, and also by direct cell-to-cell transmission, resulting in the simultaneous infection of cells with multiple viruses. We investigate the contribution of these two transmission pathways to recombinant evolution, by applying mathematical models to in vitro experimental data on the growth of fluorescent reporter viruses under static conditions (where both transmission pathways operate), and under gentle shaking conditions, where cell-to-cell transmission is largely inhibited. The parameterized mathematical models are then used to extrapolate the viral evolutionary dynamics beyond the experimental settings. Assuming a fixed basic reproductive ratio of the virus (independent of transmission pathway), we find that recombinant evolution is fastest if virus spread is driven only by cell-to-cell transmission and slows down if both transmission pathways operate. Recombinant evolution is slowest if all virus spread occurs through free virus transmission. This is due to cell-to-cell transmission 1, increasing infection multiplicity; 2, promoting the co-transmission of different virus strains from cell to cell; and 3, increasing the rate at which point mutations are generated as a result of more reverse transcription events. This study further resulted in the estimation of various parameters that characterize these evolutionary processes. For example, we estimate that during cell-to-cell transmission, an average of three viruses successfully integrated into the target cell, which can significantly raise the infection multiplicity compared to free virus transmission. In general, our study points towards the importance of infection multiplicity and cell-to-cell transmission for HIV evolution.

Funder

NSFNational Science Foundation

NSFNational Science Foundation-Simons Center for Multiscale Cell Fate Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

Reference34 articles.

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