Servicio de Virología Molecular, Centro Nacional de Biología Fundamental, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Majadahonda, 28220 Madrid, Spain1
Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva and Departament de Genètica, Universitat de València Estudi General, Dr Moliner 50, Burjassot, E-46100 Valencia, Spain2
Author for correspondence: Cecilio López-Galíndez. Fax +34 91 509 79 19. e-mail clopez{at}isciii.es
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Abstract |
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Virus populations are submitted to positive and negative forces that contribute either to the generation and accumulation of variation or to the homogenization of the virus population (Moya et al., 2000 ). Among the non-viral factors implicated in virus evolution, frequency-dependent selection (FDS) has recently been detected as operating in the evolution of vesicular stomatitis virus (Elena et al., 1997
). In order to study this concept in a retrovirus, we have carried out experiments with HIV-1 by performing competition cultures among 10 biological clones derived from a Spanish HIV-1 isolate at three different competing proportions. In this experimental setting, considering all clones as different samples from the same virus population, we have detected FDS in the HIV-1 clones.
In a previous experiment on fitness decline in HIV-1 after bottleneck transmission, the biological fitness of 10 virus clones was determined. Initial isolate s61 was recovered by standard co-culture techniques and grown in MT4 cells (Sanchez-Palomino et al., 1993 ). From this virus population, 10 biological clones were picked randomly in an MT4 plaque assay (Harada et al., 1985
) and were designated populations A1 to K1.
Quantification of the fitness of the 10 HIV-1 clones was performed in competition experiments with a genetically marked clone (J1) as described previously (Holland et al., 1991 ). These competitions were performed at three different proportions, 1:9, 1:1 and 9:1, of each clone with J1 in 5x104 MT4 cells infected at an m.o.i. of 0·1 p.f.u. per cell over five passages. Virus was recovered in each passage from the supernatant when cytopathic effect was evident, and was used to infect fresh MT4 cells. Quantification of each of the competing virus populations was carried out by the heteroduplex tracking assay (HTA) (Delwart et al., 1994
). HTA was performed with proviral DNAs amplified from competition cultures by PCR in the V1V2 region of the env gene, as described previously (Yuste et al., 1999
). The proportion of each molecular species in the competition cultures was determined by using a clone J1 probe labelled with [
-32P]dCTP. Samples were denatured at 94 °C for 2 min and then cooled rapidly (Delwart et al., 1994
). Heteroduplexes were resolved in denaturing 15% polyacrylamide8% urea gels and exposed in a Fuji 2000 densitometer for 2 h (Yuste et al., 1999
). An example of this competition quantification for G1/J1 viruses is shown in Fig. 1
. During competition cultures, due to the quasispecies nature of RNA viruses and HIV-1, new variants were observed in some of the competition cultures in the V1V2 region analysed. These variants interfered with heteroduplex quantification and, for this reason, these competitions were not considered. Some of these infections were repeated, such as the A1/J1, B1/J1 and K1/J1 competitions.
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FDS was studied by two different procedures. The first consists of plotting the log-transformed initial and final ratios [log(noJ1/J1)] of the competing clones (Ayala, 1971 ; Ayala & Campbell, 1974
). Under the null hypothesis of no FDS, we expected a regression line with a slope of 1. The stability (i.e. equilibrium) of the system can be analysed by studying the possible point of intersection between the estimated regression line and the line of slope 1, i.e. the frequency at which the two viruses have identical fitness. The equilibrium point is stable if, and only if, the slope of the regression line at the intercept is less than 1, i.e. if the relative fitnesses of both viruses are inversely related to their frequencies at that point. The study was performed by analysis of the slope obtained in each of the five passages from the different competitions.
The second method is a regression of the log-transformed ratio (noJ1/J1) versus number of passages (t=15). If there is negative FDS, the population will converge at a given stable point. Additionally, the slopes of the regression lines were compared by co-variance analysis.
Table 1 summarizes the regression analyses carried out with all competitions in the five passages at the three different proportions. Except for passage 5, where there was no significant departure from a slope of b=1, each passage showed statistical evidence of negative FDS (i.e. low frequency means high fitness) and equilibrium points. Due to the high heterogeneity among the replicates, as well as the reduced number of experimental points at passage 5, the estimated slope (b=0·60) probably also reflects negative frequency dependence. One other point requires some attention: except for passage 1, where the equilibrium point was placed at a value within the initial ratios of the study, the rest of the equilibrium points corresponded to ratios of a high concentration of non-J1 clones.
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The experiments described here indicate that the fitness values of HIV-1 can vary, depending on the competition conditions and on the relative genetic composition of the population, which is evolving constantly due to virus replication. The results of this research, together with the description of FDS in vesicular stomatitis virus (Elena et al., 1997 ), may indicate that this phenomenon is a general occurrence in the evolution of RNA virus populations. What could be the biological consequences of this effect? One is that the fitness of the virus is not constant, but varies depending on the genetic composition of the population; i.e. on the representation of the variants in the quasispecies. In consequence, if the fitness of a variant increases when the representation of the variant in the virus population decreases, the mechanism of FDS will result in the preservation of minor variants. As we may observe, this only happens when the minor variants have a higher fitness than higher-frequency variants. This observation of FDS has been suggested previously in a patient infected with HIV-1 (Holmes et al., 1992
). In the latter study, this phenomenon was observed by the antigenic evolution of V3 loop sequences. The authors observed that, in general, the most frequent sequence of each year was the one that suffered the greatest reduction in frequency in later samples, probably due to neutralization (Holmes et al., 1992
). In our study, FDS was observed in the absence of immune constraints. The observation of FDS in two different experimental settings, in the presence and absence of immune pressure, could support the generality of this concept in HIV-1.
It is a matter of speculation to decide which biological factors are responsible for fitness variation. Frequency dependence probably appeared as a consequence of differences among the members of the virus quasispecies with distinct replication efficiencies associated with several factors, including different relative rates of reverse transcription, translation or virus encapsidation and morphogenesis, as well as interactions between virus clones. In summary, this study confirms that FDS operates in the evolution of different RNA viruses. FDS could represent a general mechanism that contributes to the maintenance of virus quasispecies complexity by favouring minor variants.
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Acknowledgments |
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Footnotes |
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References |
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Received 18 April 2001;
accepted 25 September 2001.
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