Collinearity of protease mutations in HIV-1 samples with high-level protease inhibitor class resistance

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Abstract

Objectives: To determine whether pan-protease inhibitor (PI)-resistant virus populations are composed predominantly of viruses with resistance to all PIs or of diverse virus populations with resistance to different subsets of PIs. Methods: We performed deep sequencing of plasma virus samples from nine patients with high-level genotypic and/or phenotypic resistance to all licensed PIs. The nine virus samples had a median of 12 PI resistance mutations by direct PCR Sanger sequencing. Results: For each of the nine virus samples, deep sequencing showed that each of the individual viruses within a sample contained nearly all of the mutations detected by Sanger sequencing. Indeed, a median of 94.9% of deep sequence reads had each of the PI resistance mutations present as a single chromatographic peak in the Sanger sequence. A median of 5.0% of reads had all but one of the Sanger mutations that were not part of an electrophoretic mixture. Conclusions: The collinearity of PI resistance mutations in the nine virus samples demonstrated that pan-PI-resistant viruses are able to replicate in vivo despite their highly mutated protease enzymes. We hypothesize that the marked collinearity of PI resistance mutations in pan-PI-resistant virus populations results from the unique requirements for multi-PI resistance and the extensive cross-resistance conferred by many of the accessory PI resistance mutations. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.

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Babrzadeh, F., Varghese, V., Pacold, M., Liu, T. F., Nyrén, P., Schiffer, C., … Shafer, R. W. (2013). Collinearity of protease mutations in HIV-1 samples with high-level protease inhibitor class resistance. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 68(2), 414–418. https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dks409

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