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Replicative
Fitness of HIV Mutants Resistant to Enfuvirtide
Resistance to enfuvirtide/ ENF (Fuzeon),
a fusion inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1),
is conferred by mutations in the first heptad repeat of the gp41
ectodomain. In this study, the replicative fitness of recombinant
viruses carrying ENF resistance mutations was studied in growth
competition assays.
ENF
resistance mutations, selected in vitro or in vivo, were introduced
into the env gene of HIV-1(NL4-3) by site-directed mutagenesis and
expressed in HIV-1 recombinants carrying sequence tags in nef. The
doubling time of ENF-resistant viruses was highly correlated with
decreasing ENF susceptibility (R(2) = 0.859; P < 0.001). Initial
fitness experiments focused on mutants identified by in vitro selection
in the presence of ENF (L. T. Rimsky, D. C. Shugars, and T. J. Matthews,
J. Virol. 72:986-993, 1998).
In
the absence of drug, these mutants displayed reduced fitness compared
to wild-type virus with a relative order of fitness of wild type
> I37T > V38 M > D36S/V38 M; this order was reversed in
the presence of ENF.
Likewise,
recombinant viruses carrying ENF resistance mutations selected in
vivo displayed reduced fitness in the absence of ENF with a relative
order of wild type > N42T > V38A > N42T/N43K approximately
N42T/N43S > V38A/N42D approximately V38A/N42T. F
Fitness
and ENF susceptibility were inversely correlated (r = -0.988; P
< 0.001). Similar results were obtained with recombinants expressing
molecularly cloned full-length env genes obtained from patient-derived
HIV-1 isolates before and after ENF treatment.
Further
studies are needed to determine whether the reduced fitness of ENF-resistant
viruses alters their pathogenicity in vivo.
Section
of Retroviral Therapeutics, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Division
of AIDS, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts. Trimeris,
Inc., Durham, NC.
04/26/04
Reference
J Lu and others. Relative
replicative fitness of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 mutants
resistant to enfuvirtide (T-20). Journal of Virology
78(9): 4628-4637. May 2004.
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