HLA-Associated Immune Escape Pathways in HIV-1 Subtype B Gag, Pol and Nef Proteins
- Zabrina L. Brumme ,
- Mina John ,
- Jonathan M. Carlson ,
- Chanson J. Brumme ,
- Dennison Chan ,
- Mark A. Brockman ,
- Luke C. Swenson ,
- Iris Tao ,
- Sharon Szeto ,
- Pamela Rosato ,
- Jennifer Sela ,
- Carl Kadie ,
- Nicole Frahm ,
- Christian Brander ,
- David W. Haas ,
- Sharon Riddler ,
- Richard Haubrich ,
- Bruce D. Walker ,
- P. Richard Harrigan ,
- David Heckerman ,
- Simon Mallal
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Background
Despite the extensive genetic diversity of HIV-1, viral evolution in response to immune selective pressures follows broadly predictable mutational patterns. Sites and pathways of Human Leukocyte-Antigen (HLA)-associated polymorphisms in HIV-1 have been identified through the analysis of population-level data, but the full extent of immune escape pathways remains incompletely characterized. Here, in the largest analysis of HIV-1 subtype B sequences undertaken to date, we identify HLA-associated polymorphisms in the three HIV-1 proteins most commonly considered in cellular-based vaccine strategies. Results are organized into protein-wide escape maps illustrating the sites and pathways of HLA-driven viral evolution.
Methodology/Principal Findings
HLA-associated polymorphisms were identified in HIV-1 Gag, Pol and Nef in a multicenter cohort of >1500 chronically subtype-B infected, treatment-naïve individuals from established cohorts in Canada, the USA and Western Australia. At q≤0.05, 282 codons commonly mutating under HLA-associated immune pressures were identified in these three proteins. The greatest density of associations was observed in Nef (where close to 40% of codons exhibited a significant HLA association), followed by Gag then Pol (where ∼15–20% of codons exhibited HLA associations), confirming the extensive impact of immune selection on HIV evolution and diversity. Analysis of HIV codon covariation patterns identified over 2000 codon-codon interactions at q≤0.05, illustrating the dense and complex networks of linked escape and secondary/compensatory mutations.
Conclusions/Significance
The immune escape maps and associated data are intended to serve as a user-friendly guide to the locations of common escape mutations and covarying codons in HIV-1 subtype B, and as a resource facilitating the systematic identification and classification of immune escape mutations. These resources should facilitate research in HIV epitope discovery and host-pathogen co-evolution, and are relevant to the continued search for an effective CTL-based AIDS vaccine.