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Journal of Virology, January 1999, p. 152-160, Vol. 73, No. 1
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Full-Length Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Genomes from
Subtype C-Infected Seroconverters in India, with Evidence of
Intersubtype Recombination
Kavita S.
Lole,1
Robert C.
Bollinger,2
Ramesh S.
Paranjape,3
Deepak
Gadkari,1,3
Smita S.
Kulkarni,3
Nicole G.
Novak,2
Roxann
Ingersoll,4
Haynes W.
Sheppard,5 and
Stuart
C.
Ray2,*
National Institute of
Virology1 and
National AIDS Research
Institute,3 Pune, India;
Division
of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine,2
and
Center for Medical Genetics,4 Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland and
Viral and
Rickettsial Diseases Laboratory, California Department of Health
Services, Berkeley, California5
Received 11 June 1998/Accepted 12 October 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
The development of an effective human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine is likely to depend on knowledge of circulating variants of genes other than the commonly sequenced gag and
env genes. In addition, full-genome data are particularly
limited for HIV-1 subtype C, currently the most commonly
transmitted subtype in India and worldwide. Likewise, little
is known about sequence variation of HIV-1 in India, the country facing
the largest burden of HIV worldwide. Therefore, the objective of this
study was to clone and characterize the complete genome of HIV-1 from
seroconverters infected with subtype C variants in India. Cocultured
HIV-1 isolates were obtained from six seroincident individuals from
Pune, India, and virtually full-length HIV-1 genomes were amplified,
cloned, and sequenced from each. Sequence analysis revealed that five of the six genomes were of subtype C, while one was a mosaic of subtypes A and C, with multiple breakpoints in env,
nef, and the 3' long terminal repeat as determined by both
maximal
2 analysis and phylogenetic bootstrapping.
Sequences were compared for preservation of known cytotoxic T
lymphocyte (CTL) epitopes. Compared with those of the
HIV-1LAI sequence, 38% of well-defined CTL epitopes were
identical. The proportion of nonconservative substitutions for Env, at
61%, was higher (P < 0.001) than those for Gag
(24%), Pol (18%), and Nef (32%). Therefore, characterized CTL
epitopes demonstrated substantial differences from subtype B laboratory
strains, which were most pronounced in Env. Because these clones were
obtained from Indian seroconverters, they are likely to facilitate
vaccine-related efforts in India by providing potential antigens for
vaccine candidates as well as for assays of vaccine responsiveness.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
According to World Health
Organization estimates, India will have the greatest number of human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals of any country
by the end of this decade (1, 6). High rates of sexually
transmitted diseases, rapidly increasing seroprevalence in female
commercial sex workers, and inadequate facilities for HIV testing,
counseling, and prevention are the major contributing factors in the
recent explosive increases in the numbers of HIV infections (5, 6,
24, 29). While antiretroviral drugs have reduced mortality from
AIDS in developed nations, their effect will be negligible elsewhere
due to their cost. For most communicable diseases, vaccines offer
the most cost-effective control strategy. It is likely that development of a vaccine for HIV will require knowledge of the viral variants being
transmitted in the target population. Despite India's impending predominance in the worldwide pandemic, little is known of the genetic
diversity of HIV-1 in India.
The HIV-1 sequence database is growing exponentially, but the
distribution of submitted sequences is not representative of the
worldwide picture. Subtype C has been reported in nearly every region
affected by HIV-1 (11, 23, 28) and predominates in India,
and it also causes 74% of infections in southern Africa and 96% of
infections in northern Africa (11, 18, 32). Given the
combined population of India and the other regions affected, subtype C
is likely to be the most commonly transmitted HIV-1 subtype worldwide.
In contrast, 7% of the available HIV-1 sequence data is from
subtype C-infected individuals (37), and of the 46 completely sequenced HIV-1 genomes (excluding multiple
derivatives of HIV-1LAI), only two are of subtype C, one
from a 1992 Brazilian sample and the other from a 1986 Ethiopian
sample (37). In November 1997, an analysis of cross-clade
epitope variation (9) excluded the C clade from evaluation
of p24gag epitopes because of a lack of
sequence data, whereas there was sufficient data to analyze
subtypes A, B, D, F, G, and H (no HIV-1 harboring a subtype E
gag gene has been found). Further sequence data from subtype
C is needed, but the past approach of generating data from small
subgenomic amplicons is no longer sufficient.
Recent developments have made full-genome characterization of HIV-1
isolates both important and feasible. First, the recognition of
intersubtype recombination in a significant proportion of HIV-1 sequences (44, 45) has led to detection of mosaic genomes in
many regions of the world affected by multiple subtypes (14, 17,
31). Subtypes A, B, and C in India have been reported (4,
22, 30, 31, 59), but mosaic HIV-1 there has not been reported.
The existence of such recombinants makes characterization of variants
by analyzing subgenomic segments incomplete. Second, immune responses
to vaccines based on single genes such as env have been
limited (13), and attention is being shifted toward multivalent vaccines that incorporate other gene products. Third, interactions among discontinuous regions of the genome, such as between
the long terminal repeat (LTR) and pol (26), can
be detected only when such regions can be analyzed from the same template.
In an effort to characterize subtype C virus genomes being
transmitted currently in India, viral isolates were
obtained from individuals with seroincident infections in India.
Three of the isolates (collected in 1994 and 1995) were known to be
non-syncytium inducing (NSI) and therefore resembled viruses
transmitted through unprotected sexual contact, which account for 75 to
85% of new infections (2, 15, 61). These isolates were
cloned, and nearly full-length genomic sequences were determined.
Detailed sequence analysis was performed, as was an analysis of
variation in characterized cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitopes.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Study subjects and virus isolates.
As part of an ongoing
prospective study of HIV seroconversion, HIV-1 was cultured from
peripheral blood samples collected from six seroconverters from the
city of Pune in western India (Table 1).
Three subjects were identified in 1993 by indeterminate Western
blotting result, which developed to a fully positive result over a
period of months. The other three subjects were initially seronegative
during follow-up in a sexually transmitted disease clinic but were
found to be seropositive at a later visit. While none of the subjects
had symptoms associated with HIV infection, all three subjects
identified in 1994 and 1995 had syphilis and genital ulcer disease.
Viruses were propagated by short-term cocultivation of the subjects'
peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with
phytohemagglutinin-stimulated PBMCs from healthy donors
(51). The samples obtained in 1994 and 1995 were tested for
in vitro phenotype, and they were all NSI. High-molecular-weight DNA
was extracted from infected cells using the Easy DNA kit as recommended
by the manufacturer (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.).
Heteroduplex mobility analysis.
Subtype determinations by
heteroduplex mobility analysis (HMA) were performed according to the
WHO heteroduplex mobility analysis protocol (version 3), using supplied
reagents (3, 16, 22). This kit was obtained from the NIH
Research and Reference Reagent Program (catalog no. 2751).
Large template amplification and cloning.
Virtually
full-length HIV-1 genome amplification was performed with the LTR
primers MSF12 (5'-AAATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAG-3') and MSR5
(5'-GCACTCAAGGCAAGCTTTATTGAGGCT-3') described previously (48), which amplify the entire HIV-1 genome except for 75 bp in the U5 region of the LTR. They are located at nucleotide positions 623 through 646 and 521 through 547 in HIV-1LAI,
respectively. PCR was performed with the Expand long template
polymerase preparation (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) in a
volume of 50 µl overlaid with mineral oil. The reaction mixtures were
incubated in a PTC-100 thermal cycler (MJ Research, Watertown, Mass.)
in thin-walled tubes. DNA templates from PBMC cocultures were titrated over a set of dilutions (500, 250, 50, and 10 ng) to obtain a 9-kb
amplification product with a minimum number of nonspecific bands and to
minimize the number of input templates. The thermal cycling consisted
of 94°C for 2 min followed by 10 cycles of 94°C for 10 s,
62°C for 30 s, and 68°C for 10 min. This was followed by 20 cycles of 94°C for 10 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 68°C for 10 min. The final incubation was at 72°C for 10 min. Products of amplification reactions were analyzed on 0.6% agarose gels (SeaKem GTG; FMC Biolabs), and the 9-kb bands were gel purified by using a
Qiaquick gel purification kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, Calif.). The
gel-purified PCR products were cloned by using the pCR 2.1 vector in
the TA cloning kit (Invitrogen), and colonies were picked at random.
Transformed bacteria were incubated at 25 to 30°C. The clones were
screened for plasmids carrying a 9-kb insert on the basis of their
electrophoretic migration and banding pattern after EcoRI
digestion, and a group of clones with the same banding pattern was
called a clonotype. One clone, representing the predominant clonotype
for each isolate, was chosen for automated sequencing. Sequencing of
both strands was performed by using cycle sequencing and dye
termination on an automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Inc., Foster
City, Calif.).
Sequence analysis.
Sequenced fragments were assembled into
contiguous sequences, and a consensus of the two strands was formed by
using the Sequencher program (Gene Codes Corp., Ann Arbor, Mich.). A
representative genome for each major subtype was selected from a
current reference list (33). Sequences were aligned by using
Clustal W (56), and the alignments were edited manually in
Vised version 1.2 (40), in order to shift gaps to restore
codons and perform translation.
For phylogenetic tree construction, sites containing a gap in any
aligned sequence were removed (gap stripped), as were areas
of
ambiguous alignment, and each alignment was then used to generate
a
distance file by using DNADIST from the PHYLIP package (
20)
(maximum likelihood option; transition/transversion ratio of 1.5)
and
subjected to a bootstrap analysis (
19) by using SEQBOOT,
DNADIST, NEIGHBOR, and CONSENSE. The original distance matrix
was then
used as input for NEIGHBOR to generate a final phylogenetic
tree, which
was visualized by using Tree View (
39).
Analysis for intersubtype mosaicism.
SimPlot, an interactive
32-bit software program for Microsoft Windows computers, was created to
plot similarity versus position (41) and is similar in
purpose to the Recombination Inference Program (RIP) for UNIX computers
(52). The results of SimPlot were equivalent to the
graphical output from RIP (data not shown). Briefly, SimPlot calculates
and plots the percent identity of the query sequence to a panel of
reference sequences in a sliding window, which is moved across the
alignment in steps. The window and step sizes are adjustable.
Evidence of mosaicism led to more extensive analysis, in which the
env gene was aligned to consensus sequences for subtypes
A
and C (with subtype B as an outgroup) from a 0% threshold consensus
env alignment (from
http://hiv-web.lanl.gov/RIP/BACKGD_ALIGNMENTS/).
The aligned
sequence was then compared to the 50% consensus file,
to exclude
poorly conserved sites. Alignments were analyzed for
recombination
breakpoints by maximization of
2 as previously described
(
44,
53). Briefly, the SimPlot program
was used to identify
informative sites as described by Robertson
et al. (
44).
Phylogenetically informative sites in this context
are those at which
four taxa are divided equally into two groups,
each of which has
identity at that site. Each informative site
supports one of three
possible phylogenetic relationships among
the four taxa, and a cluster
analysis maximizing the value of
2 is then used to
select breakpoints among the clusters.
P values
for the
resultant divisions of sites were calculated by using
Fisher's exact
test. These breakpoints were used to divide the
alignment into segments
for phylogenetic tree construction as
described
above.
Analysis of epitope sequence variation.
Predicted protein
sequences were compared to the optimal epitope sequences for the
best-defined HIV CTL epitopes (8), which are based on the
subtype B isolate HIV-1LAI, also known as human T-cell
leukemia virus type IIIB (HTLV-IIIB). The epitopes were compared to the
corresponding sequences for the Indian isolates, and each was scored as
identical, different due to conservative changes only, or different due
to at least one nonconservative change. Conservative changes were
changes within one of six physicochemical groups as described by
George, Hunt, and Barker (27). For comparison, protein
sequence distances were calculated for entire genes by using the
program PROTDIST in the PHYLIP package. To count all differences, the
Kimura distance option was used, whereas to count only physiochemical
differences the Categories (George/Hunt/Barker) option was used.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences
described here have been submitted to GenBank and assigned accession
no. AF067154 through AF067159.
 |
RESULTS |
Amplification of virtually full-length genomes from India.
PCR
amplification of cocultured virus resulted in visible bands of the
proper size in ethidium bromide-stained agarose gels for the isolates
from all six of the HIV-1-infected subjects from India. After
ligation and transformation, 7 to 14 clones for each of the six
isolates were found to contain inserts of at least 9 kb.
EcoRI digestion allowed selection of one representative of
the predominant clonotype for each subject, and herein these six clones
are referred to by the identifier of the source subject. A BLAST search
did not reveal any evidence of sample contamination. For the
entire genome, the mean intersubject sequence diversity among these six
clones was 5.6% (range, 2.8 to 9.0%), while the mean difference
between these isolates and the Ethiopian subtype C reference clone
C2220 was 9.4% (range, 8.8 to 11.3%).
Evidence for mosaicism.
We performed genome-wide comparisons
of all clones to available full-length reference sequences in order to
determine the viral subtype, to detect evidence of intersubtype
recombination, and to identify potential breakpoints for any such
events (Fig. 1). The reference
sequences chosen for subtypes A (92UG037), B (RF), C (C2220),
D (NDK), F (93BR020), and H (90CF056) are ones for which there is
no evidence of mosaicism. There is no nonmosaic sequence available for
subtype E, and the mosaicism of the available sequence for subtype G is
debated, so well-characterized sequences were selected (10,
25). Isolate 93TH253 is a prototypical A/E recombinant, composed
primarily of subtype A sequence, with the areas assigned to subtype E
limited to vif, vpr, env, and nef. The subtype G isolate 92NG083.2 was recently described
as an A/G recombinant, with subtype A homology in the accessory
gene (vif and vpr) regions (25, 43).
Available sequences for subtypes I and J were too short to merit
inclusion in Fig. 1. Five of the six clones were most similar to
subtype C throughout the entire genome, a finding supported by
subsequent analyses, described below. However, while clone 95IN21301 is
predominantly subtype C, it shows greater similarity to the subtype A
sequence in the 3' half of the genome: in env and
nef and in the U3-R region of the 3' LTR.

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FIG. 1.
Plots of similarity (generated by SimPlot) of a set of
reference sequences to the 93IN999 (upper panel) and 95IN21301 (lower
panel) genomes. Each curve is a comparison between the genome being
analyzed and a reference genome. Each point plotted is the percent
identity within a sliding window 600 bp wide centered on the position
plotted, with a step size between points of 20 bp. Positions containing
gaps were excluded from the comparison. The horizontal bars above the
curves are a cartoon of the open reading frames of the HIV-1 genome,
arranged as indicated in Fig. 3. The colors are consistent with those
used for the similarity curves and indicate the subtype to which that
part of the genome is most similar based on the adjacent similarity
plot. Results for the remaining four genomes discussed in this report
were consistent with those for 93IN999.
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More detailed analysis of the
env and
nef and LTR
regions of 95IN21301 was performed to confirm mosaicism and
determine recombination
breakpoints. Similarity plots of the
95IN21301 sequence with subtype
consensus sequences suggested the
presence of five points of crossover
(Fig.
2A and
B). By the method of maximization of
2, the most likely breakpoints were located (
44,
53). These
positions, as well as the subtype assignments, were
corroborated
when phylogenetic trees with bootstrap analysis were
constructed
for the resulting regions (Fig.
2A and B), though the small
number
of informative sites at the 3' end of
nef makes the
precise site
of crossover difficult to determine. The results of this
detailed
analysis, which are depicted in Fig.
3, show that 95IN21301 is
distinct from
the only two previously reported A/C recombinant
genomes, ZAM184 and
92RW009.6.

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FIG. 2.
(A) Similarity plot as in Fig. 1 for the env
gene of isolate 95IN21301, with a window size of 200 bp and a step size
of 10 bp. The subtype reference sequences were majority (50%)
consensus sequences for each of the subtypes, obtained from the Los
Alamos web site (http://hiv-web.lanl.gov). The dashed regions indicate
areas in V1 and V2 in which less than 50% of the sites could be
compared due to gaps or lack of subtype consensus. Dotted vertical
lines indicate breakpoints identified by maximization of
2 as described in Materials and Methods, with numbers of
informative sites shared by 95IN21301 and the subtype in each bounded
region indicated below in the color assigned to that subtype.
P values were calculated by using Fisher's exact test.
Four-member trees consistent with these sites are shown at the left.
Above are phylogenetic trees for each region bounded by the
recombination breakpoints showing the proportion of 100 bootstrapped
trees surrounding the indicated relationship. The predicted gp120/gp41
processing site is at base 2044 in this alignment. (B) Similarity plot
as in panel A for the nef gene and the U3/R LTR region of
isolate 95IN21301. The LTR begins at position 296 in this alignment,
and the nef termination codon is at position 634. Subtype
majority consensus sequences were determined by using SF170, U455, and
UG037 (subtype A), RF, MN, and TH475 (subtype B), and C2220, BR025,
93IN904, 93IN905, 93IN999, 94IN11246, and 95IN21068 (subtype C).
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FIG. 3.
Cartoon depicting the subtype assignment of each region
of the HIV-1 genome for all characterized A/C recombinant genomes.
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Initial analysis for mosaicism suggested the presence of subtype E and
G sequences in a small portion of the 3' half of the
95IN21301
env gene, but difficulty separating subtypes A, G, and
E in
this region has been reported previously and may be the result
of a
recent common ancestry of this region of the genome as well
as
diversity within the A subtype (
52). Further analysis
provided
no statistical support for the presence of a subtype other
than
subtype A in this region (data not
shown).
To exclude the possibility that the recombination event was an artifact
that occurred during coculture or PCR amplification
(
7),
uncultured PBMCs from subject 21301 were obtained. Genomic
DNA was
isolated, and PCR was performed with the ED5 and ED12
primers,
which span the V1 to V5 region of
env, provided in the
HMA
kit (
16). Direct sequencing was performed. The resulting
sequence was 97.2% similar to the 95IN21301 sequence, in contrast
to
the other five isolates, which showed 80.7 to 82.5% similarity
to the uncultured 21301 sequence. Intersubtype recombination
analysis
revealed the same subtype A and C breakpoints (data not
shown).
Therefore, this intersubtype mosaic was not an artifact of in
vitro
manipulation.
The extreme 3' end of the 95IN21301 sequence appeared to have a final
subtype A to C breakpoint. Consistent with the data
for the
nef gene, the overlapping U3 region was highly similar
to
subtype A sequences and contained only two NF-

B binding motifs
(data
not shown), whereas the subtype C LTR characteristically
contains three
NF-

B sites (
60). In contrast, the TAR region
of 95IN21301
was most similar to subtype C and contained a three-base
TAR bulge
rather than the two-base bulge seen in subtype A (
26).
The
location of a breakpoint between the U3 and R regions would
be
consistent with reverse transcription of a genome with a subtype
C 5'
LTR and a subtype A 3' LTR. The 5' LTR serves as the template
for the R
region of the resultant 3'
LTR.
Comparison of sequence-based and HMA-based subtyping.
The presence of a subtype A env sequence in cloned
95IN21301 was not surprising, as preliminary HMA for the V3 to
V5 region of env had shown that the isolate from which
this clone was derived was most closely related to subtype A, while the
isolates from IN21068 and IN11246 were most closely related to subtypes
C2 (Zambia) and C3 (India), respectively (data not shown).
Construction of a phylogenetic tree from the region assessed by the HMA
revealed that all of the clones clustered with the subtype C3 (India)
prototype except for clone 95IN21301, which clustered with subtype A
(Fig. 4).

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FIG. 4.
Phylogenetic tree based on the env gene
sequences compared in the HMA reaction used to identify genotypes. The
tree is based on 834 sites that remained after gap stripping of the
alignment predicted for the ED5 to ED12 PCR product. Numbers at nodes
indicate clades supported in more than 50 of 100 bootstrapped trees,
and the scale for genetic distance is indicated below. The prototype
sequences for the subtypes indicated were as follows: A1, RW020; A3,
SF170; C1, MA959; C2, ZAM18; C3, IN868; and C4, BR025.
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Detailed characterization of genomic sequences.
Having
determined the genetic subtypes of the clones, we turned to an analysis
of the sequence features of each of the clones. There were very few
lethal mutations. Conceptual translation of the eight recognized
genes of HIV-1 revealed that these reading frames were
all open for clones 94IN11246, 95IN21301, 93IN904, 93IN905, and
93IN999. In contrast to the other clones, 95IN21068 had what is
expected to be a lethal mutation, a premature termination codon in
pol 57 bp downstream from the putative gag-pol
frameshift site (37). The other potentially lethal mutation
was in clone 95IN21301, an A-to-G transition in the 3' splice acceptor
site of the tat-rev intron.
In addition to the mutations expected to be lethal, the five nonmosaic
subtype C clones contained mutations which have been
noted in other
isolates and are unlikely to be lethal. All of
these clones have a
premature termination codon at 251 bp downstream
from the splice
acceptor site. This termination appears to be
a feature of the C
subtype, present in all of the subtype C clones
presented here as well
as in previously sequenced subtype C genomes
C2220 (
47) and
BR025 (
25). It is unlikely to be lethal, since
in vitro data
have led some authors to state that this region
of
rev has
no functional significance (
34). In clone 93IN999
the
vpu start codon is replaced by ATA, a feature shared by many
previously reported isolates, which is thought to modulate the
relative
expression of Vpu and Env from the same spliced mRNA
(
55).
Clone 94IN11246 has an eight-base deletion at nucleotide
572 of
nef, resulting in a frameshift and an open reading frame
that is 136 bp longer than usual. The impact of this is difficult
to
predict, but the deletion does not affect the SH3 binding motifs
and
alters only the last 19 amino acids of the usual open reading
frame.
Another characteristic of subtype C genomes is the presence of three
NF-

B binding motifs, one more than usual (
36). All
but
two available subtype C LTR sequences have three NF-

B binding
motifs
(
60). The two exceptions have two (92BR025.8) and four
(C-Altr) such sites. It is noteworthy that clone 95IN21301 lacks
both the
rev truncation feature and the extra NF-

B site
feature
of subtype C, both of which fall in areas assigned to subtype
A
in the analysis
above.
We investigated the known
pol sequence markers for drug
resistance, with the caveat that since reported resistance markers
are
based almost entirely on subtype B sequences their relevance
to subtype
C remains to be determined. Using the markers summarized
by Mellors et
al. (
35), we searched the reverse transcriptase
(RT) and
protease (PR) genes for known resistance mutations. In
this
anti-retroviral drug-naïve cohort, none of the recognized
RT
resistance mutations was present, consistent with a previous
report
about subtype C isolates in Africa (
50). Markers of PR
inhibitor resistance (K20R, M36I, D60E, and L63P) were present,
but
these are felt to be minor and are commonly seen in drug-naïve
individuals (
12,
49).
Relationship to previously reported Indian HIV-1
sequences.
The degree to which these sequences represent
variants circulating in India was studied through construction of a
series of phylogenetic trees that included sequences previously
obtained in India by other groups. A tree constructed with
pol sequences obtained from New Delhi and Pune (54,
57) (Fig. 5) demonstrates strong
clustering of the sequences discussed in this report with subtype C
isolates from other cities in India but segregation of the sequences
from subtype C isolates from Brazil and Ethiopia. Similar trees were
obtained by using smaller gag sequences from samples
from a group of Indian expatriates in Kuwait (58),
env genes from samples collected in New Delhi and Pune
(57), and unpublished nef sequences from samples
collected in northern India (GenBank accession numbers Y15116 to
Y15123). Based on these trees, the sequences reported here are
more similar to previously reported sequences from strains
circulating in India than to that of Ethiopian subtype C strain C2220.
It is also notable that the (mosaic) 95IN21301 sequences for
gag and pol are clearly related to the other
Indian subtype C sequences, suggesting that the recombination event
occurred in India. These results are consistent with the possible
existence of a distinct Indian clade within subtype C as previously
postulated (54).

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FIG. 5.
Phylogenetic tree comparing the sequences reported here
to Indian sequences reported previously for pol (692 bp)
(54), with bootstrap values greater than 50% indicated. The
representatives for each of the subtypes were as follows: A, U455; B,
RF; C, C2220 and BR025; D, NDK; and G, 92NG083.
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For
gag, the mean genetic distance between the 1993 isolates
and the 1994 and 1995 isolates was 3.2% (range, 2.1 to 4.4%),
which
is intermediate between the value of 4.1% (3.0 to 4.7%)
among the
1994 and 1995 isolates and that of 3.0% (2.3 to 3.4%)
among the 1993 isolates. These results suggest that the older
isolates were more
closely related to one another, that the more
recent isolates have
diverged from the earlier isolates, and that
the more recent isolates
are diverging from each other as well,
consistent with general
estimates of 1% divergence per year for
HIV-1 (
38).
Analysis of amino acid variation in known epitopes.
Genomic sequences offer an opportunity to assess conservation
of known CTL epitopes that may have an impact on vaccine
effectiveness. In order to provide an estimate of cross-clade CTL
epitope conservation, the predicted protein sequences of these viruses
were compared to the optimal epitope sequences for the best-defined HIV
CTL epitopes, which are based on the subtype B isolate
HIV-1LAI (8). Of 100 HIV-1 CTL epitopes, 38, 18, 23, and 21 are located in Gag, Pol, Env, and Nef, respectively. The
results of this analysis are summarized in Table
2. Because nonconservative changes are most likely to abrogate major histocompatibility complex or T-cell receptor binding, we compared the proportion of epitopes containing nonconservative changes with that of epitopes that were identical or
differed by only conservative changes. These data suggest that HIV
isolates from India have strong similarity in 77, 78, and 70% of known
CTL epitopes in Gag, Pol, and Nef, respectively, while in Env they
share strong similarity in only 48% of these epitopes
(P < 0.001 for each pairwise comparison). This
difference was not entirely due to a greater degree of variation in
Env, because the proportions of epitopes which were identical were 34, 64, 28, and 36% for Gag, Pol, Nef, and Env, respectively. These
findings suggest that when a mutation appears in an epitope, it is more
likely to be nonconservative if it is located in Env.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We report the first virtually full-length genomic HIV-1 sequence
data from India, with evidence that mosaic virus is present and that A
and C intersubtype recombination has occurred. These clones were
obtained from replicative virus of known HIV seroconverters and are
therefore more likely to reflect HIV transmitted in India than
previously available genomic sequences. Moreover, the addition of the
sequences presented here more than doubles the number of published
subtype C genomes.
That mosaic HIV-1 is present in India is important but not surprising.
Subtypes A and C have been present in India since at least 1992 (11). HMA analysis has been used to detect the presence of
HIV-1 subtypes A, B, and C as well as HIV-2 in this cohort in Pune
(16). We are unaware of other A and C mosaic genomes with a
breakpoint pattern similar to the one presented here. In the Thailand
epidemic, an early balance between a subtype B strain and an A-E
recombinant was quickly shifted to dominance of the recombinant
variant (58). A similar A-E mosaic variant, apparently a
descendant of the same recombination event, has been found in an
infected individual in the Central African Republic, but to date a
purely subtype E genome has not been found (26). This leads to speculation that the recombinant variant had some
significant advantage over the parental E strain and that the
nonrecombinant virus was eliminated by selection. Such advantages may
include alterations in tropism, replication efficiency, or immune
recognition. As with influenza virus, recombination may allow more
efficient transmission in an exposed population.
Initial characterization of the A-C recombinant by HMA suggested that
it was a subtype A isolate, illustrating the limitations of
characterization of isolates on the basis of a single genomic region.
In addition, the implications and accuracy of HMA for intrasubtype
assignments are unknown. The phylogenetic results differed from the HMA
results for subject 95IN21068; therefore, distinctions finer than
subtype may not always be reliable when this technique is used.
While subtype assignment is useful for epidemiologic and virologic
investigation, its relevance to vaccine development is unclear. Recent
reports have demonstrated strong cross-subtype CTL recognition but have
not addressed the degree to which such cross-clade responses vary from
gene to gene or among large numbers of subjects (9, 21, 46).
Our data suggest that there are significant differences in the degree
of epitope variation among the genes, especially when the ratio of
nonconservative changes to conservative changes in epitopes is
considered. The present study was not designed to determine the impact
of such variation.
To assess variation in relevant CTL epitopes, we utilized a database of
well-characterized epitopes (8). This database is a valuable
resource, but it is important to note its inherent biases. It is not
generally feasible to perform CTL assays of PBMCs from infected
individuals by using their HIV-1 quasispecies as the target antigen, as
we have done previously (42). Instead, standard assays use
laboratory strains like HIV-1LAI (also known as HTLV-IIIB),
resulting in detection of T-cell clones which recognize more conserved
epitopes. This is demonstrated by the use, with only two exceptions, of
HIV-1LAI as the prototype sequence of the 100 best-characterized HIV-1 epitopes in the database (8). As a
result, this epitope analysis is likely to be biased toward conserved epitopes.
Based on the epitope analysis, CTL-mediated immunological pressure does
not appear to alter the relative rate of fixation of nonconservative
substitutions compared with such substitutions in the overall genes,
whether the method of counting substitutions assesses every change or
only nonconservative substitutions (Fig. 6). This may be due to constraints on
nonconservative changes due to their impact on protein function. In
contrast, conservative changes in epitopes were distributed among the
genes in a pattern that was quite different from changes in the overall
gene sequences (Fig. 6). One explanation for these differences is that
immunological pressure has a tendency to select for variants with
conservative changes in epitope sequences. Conservative changes in
epitopes may have a greater impact on CTL recognition than is
appreciated from in vitro studies.

View larger version (32K):
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|
FIG. 6.
Distributions of amino acid sequence differences in
epitopes (A) and overall gene sequences (B). All differences in
sequences are shown on the left, while only nonconservative differences
identified based on physicochemical properties are shown on the
right.
|
|
We report the first HIV-1 full-length genomes from infected
individuals in India. Five of them are of subtype C, and one
is a new subtype A-C mosaic. Although two of the genomes
appear to be defective, and they come from a single city in India,
these sequences are genetically representative of the breadth of
subtype C sequences previously reported from various regions of the
country. These clones, particularly since they come from newly infected individuals, may be important in the development of an effective vaccine for use in India.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank the patients and staff of the health clinics in Pune for
providing the clinical samples and Dale Dondero, Michel Lubaki, and
Melchior Mwandagalinwa Kashamuka. Critical review of the manuscript by
Beatrice Hahn is gratefully acknowledged.
This investigation was supported by the Fogarty International Center,
National Institutes of Health (NIH), Program of International Training
Grants in Epidemiology Related to AIDS, D43 TW0000, and by the HIVNET
contract with Family Health International (FHI) with funds from the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), NIH
grant N01-AI-35173-113 and NIAID grant 1 R01 AI41369-01A1.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of
Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 720 Rutland Ave., Ross 1159, Baltimore, MD 21205. Phone: (410) 614-2891. Fax: (410) 614-9775. E-mail: sray{at}jhu.edu.
 |
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Lozano, G., Trenado, H. P., Valverde, R. A., Navas-Castillo, J.
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Garmiri, P., Loua, A., Haba, N., Candotti, D., Allain, J.-P.
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Aoki, K., Ishiko, H., Konno, T., Shimada, Y., Hayashi, A., Kaneko, H., Ohguchi, T., Tagawa, Y., Ohno, S., Yamazaki, S.
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