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Elsevier, Virus Research, 1-2(130), p. 34-42, 2007

DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2007.05.011

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HIV-1 biological phenotype and predicted coreceptor usage based on V3 loop sequence in paired PBMC and plasma samples

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Paired PBMCs and plasma samples from 34 HIV-infected patients were studied to verify the relationship between coreceptor use based on genotyping ofV3region ofHIV-1 envelope gp120 and biological phenotype with virus isolation and subsequent correlation to clinical characteristics. The “11/25” rule, geno2pheno and PSSM were compared. All SI patients were HIV-1 subtype B (p = 0.04) and had a lower CD4 count than NSI patients (p = 0.01), while no differences were observed in mean HIV-RNA log (p = 0.6). SI phenotype was not associated with AIDS-defining events (p = 0.1) or with concurrent antiretroviral therapy (p = 0.4).With geno2pheno, which shows the highest sensibility (83%), an X4 or X4/R5 genotype in PBMC DNA was also associated to B-subtype and lower CD4 count (p = 0.01) compared to R5 isolates. Based on plasma RNA sequences, the predicted coreceptor usage agreed with PBMC DNA in 79% of cases with the “11/25” rule, 82% with geno2pheno, and 82% with PSSM. A X4 virus in plasma (but not in PBMCs) was significantly associated with HAART in all three methods (p = 0.01 for “11/25” rule, p = 0.01 for geno2pheno and p = 0.03 for PSSM). Due to viral mixtures and/or difficulties in genotype interpretation, current V3 sequence-based methods cannot accurately predict HIV-1 coreceptor use.