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The Evolution of HIV Biology and natural history of the virus Fig. 1.1 Global incidence of HIV/AIDS. Number of cases and per cent of adults infected, ages 15-45. Data from UNAIDS (2005). 1/5th in South and SE Asia 3/5th’s of HIV+ cases in Africa Three global epidemics Recent epidemic in Russia and Ukraine The epidemic in Africa From UNAIDS (2006) Botswana Zimbabwe Swaziland Lesotho In sub-Saharan Africa Life expectancy at birth in Botswana Fig. 1.5 The life cycle of HIV Extracellular stage: transmission Intracellular stage: replication • CD4 protein is found on T cells, HIV “uses” CD4 to invade them • CD4 serves important functions in the immune system • e.g. CD4 aids in binding of macrophages to helper T (TH) cells – stabilizes antigen “presentation” to TH cell – TH cells play a central role in both pathways of immunity HIV: a retrovirus—DNA is reversetranscribed from viral RNA by reverse transcriptase Intracellular replication stages How does HIV cause AIDS? TEM of HIV budding (arrow) from a T lymphocyte (image: R. Hunt, Univ. S. Carolina) • Simple answer: depletion of T cells killed by HIV replicating within them suppresses immunity, leading to opportunistic infections • Complete answer: – complex: immune activation hastens collapse by providing host cells – close phylogenetic relative, SIV, provides useful model for studying this Fig. 1.8a Viral load in an untreated patient • rapid increase, followed by drop, steady recovery (reflects immune response) • evolution within patient of declining target cell selectivity Fig. 1.8b T cell depletion • decline, recovery, collapse of T cell population • drastic decline in gut (vulnerable to pathogen attack) • slow disease onset Fig. 1.8c Activation of the immune system • remains highly activated throughout! • enhances rate of destruction of HIV infected cells, but • provides steady source of host T cells • exhausts limited capacity to re-supply killed T cells The evolution of HIV Why do AZT and other antiviral drugs fail over the long term? Fig. 1.9 How AZT blocks DNA synthesis by HIV reverse transcriptase RT mistakes azidothymidine (AZT) for the normal nucleoside (T) Fig. 1.9 How AZT blocks DNA synthesis by the reverse transcriptase of HIV the azide group on AZT stops DNA synthesis and RT falls off AZT treatments • Initially, low doses dropped viral load, increased CD4 T cell counts • Increasing doses, over time, lost effectiveness • No evidence that patient’s enzymatic activation of AZT declined Evolution of AZT resistance • A change in the genetic composition of patient’s viral population? • To test – Sample virus from patient over time as AZT treatment progresses – Grow virus on cells in culture – Test inhibitory action of increasing doses of AZT Fig. 1.11 Evolution of AZT resistance within individual patients from Larder et al. (1989) HIV populations can take only 6 months to evolve high AZT resistance Some random reverse transcriptase mutations will cause “shape changes” in the active site (arrow), allowing them to recognize and not pick up AZT Space-filling model of reverse transcriptase [from Cohen (1993)]. The large groove is where RNA template and nucleotides bind. Drug resistance mutations (in red: includes the AZTR mutations) are located within this groove Fig. 1.14 How populations of HIV evolve AZT resistance (through natural selection within patients) HIV mutation rates • High replication rate: 10 million to 100 million new virions per day (Ho et al. 1995, Wei et al. 1995) • High reverse transcriptase mutation rate (~1 mutation/genome/ replication) – polymerase is error prone – HIV lacks DNA repair