15-20% of HIV substitution mutations are associated with recombination.
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Auteurs |
T Schlub A Grimm Redmond Smyth D Cromer A Chopra S Mallal V Venturi C Waugh J Mak M Davenport |
Unité de recherche du site |
IBMC - Architecture et Réactivité de l'ARN - ARN - UPR9002 |
Langue |
en |
Volume |
88 |
Numéro |
7 |
Page de début |
3837 |
Page de fin |
3849 |
Date de première publication |
2014 |
ISSN |
0022-538X |
Titre de la source (revue, livre…) |
Journal of Virology |
Résumé |
HIV undergoes a high rate of mutation and recombination during reverse transcription, but it is not known whether these events occur independently or are linked mechanistically. Here we use a system of silent marker mutations in HIV and a single Show moreHIV undergoes a high rate of mutation and recombination during reverse transcription, but it is not known whether these events occur independently or are linked mechanistically. Here we use a system of silent marker mutations in HIV and a single round of infection in primary T-lymphocytes, combined with a high-throughput sequencing and mathematical modelling approach to directly estimate the viral recombination and mutation rates. From >7 million nt of sequences from HIV infection, we observe 4801 recombination events and 859 substitution mutations (≈1.51 and 0.12 events per 1000 nt respectively). We use experimental controls to account for PCR-induced and transfection-induced recombination and sequencing error. We find the single cycle virus-induced mutation rate is 4.6 × 10-5 mutations per nt after correction. By sorting our data into recombined and non-recombined sequences, we find a significantly higher mutation rate in recombined regions (p=0.003, Fisher's exact). We use a permutation approach to eliminate a number of potential confounding factors and confirm that mutation occurs around the site of recombination, and is not simply co-located in the genome. By comparing mutation rates in recombined and non-recombined regions we find that recombination-associated mutations account for 15-20% of all mutations occurring during reverse transcription. Show less |
DOI | 10.1128/JVI.03136-13 |
Éditeur |
American Society for Microbiology |
URL éditeur |
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24453357?dopt=Abstract |
Type de publication |
journal article |
Type de publication |
ACL |
Topic |
Aucun |
Fonction |
aut |
Audience |
International |
URL | https://univoak.eu/islandora/object/islandora:54912 |