Neutralization Sensitivity Of Genital Tract Hiv-1: Shift In Selective Milieu Shapes The Population Available To Transmit

AIDS(2021)

引用 0|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
Objective: Previous studies indicate that transmitted/founder HIV-1 isolates are sensitive to neutralization by the transmitting donor's antibodies. This is true in at least a subset of sexual transmissions. We investigated whether this selection for neutralization-sensitive variants begins in the genital tract of the donor, prior to transmission. Design: Laboratory study. Methods: HIV-1 viruses from semen and blood of two male donors living with HIV-1 were tested for neutralization sensitivity to contemporaneous autologous antibodies. Results: In one donor, semen-derived clones (n = 10, geometric mean ID50 = 176) were 1.75-fold [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.11-2.76, P = 0.018] more sensitive than blood-derived clones (n = 12, geometric mean ID50 = 111) to the individual's own contemporaneous neutralizing antibodies. Enhanced overall neutralization sensitivity of the semen-derived clones could not explain the difference because these semen-derived isolates showed a trend of being less sensitive to neutralization by a pool of heterologous clade-matched sera. This relative sensitivity of semen-derived clones was not observed in a second donor who did not exhibit obvious independent HIV-1 replication in the genital tract. A Bayesian analysis suggested that the set of semen sequences that we analysed originated from a blood sequence. Conclusion: In some instances, selection for neutralization-sensitive variants during HIV-1 transmission begins in the genital tract of the donor and this may be driven by independent HIV-1 replication in this compartment. Thus, a shift in the selective milieu in the male genital tract allows outgrowth of neutralization-sensitive HIV-1 variants, shaping the population of isolates available for transmission to a new host.
更多
查看译文
关键词
HIV-1, neutralization, selection, transmission
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要