keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37745449/conformational-flexibility-of-hiv-1-envelope-glycoproteins-modulates-transmitted-founder-sensitivity-to-broadly-neutralizing-antibodies
#21
Sneha Ratnapriya, Karunakar Reddy Pothula, Kim-Marie A Dam, Durgadevi Parthasarathy, Héctor Cervera Benet, Ruth Parsons, Xiao Huang, Salam Sammour, Katarzyna Janowska, Miranda Harris, Shamim Ahmed, Samuel Sacco, Joseph Sodroski, Michael D Bridges, Wayne L Hubbell, Priyamvada Acharya, Alon Herschhorn
HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins (Envs) mediate viral entry and are the sole target of neutralizing antibodies. Envs of most primary HIV-1 strains exist in a closed conformation and occasionally sample more open Env states. Thus, current knowledge guides immunogen design to mimic the closed Env conformation as the preferred target for eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to block HIV-1 entry. Here we show that Env-preferred conformations of 6 out of 13 (46%) transmitted/founder (T/F) strains tested are incompletely closed...
September 13, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37745406/transmission-of-highly-virulent-cxcr4-tropic-hiv-1-through-the-mucosal-route-in-an-individual-with-a-wild-type-ccr5-genotype
#22
Manukumar Honnayakanahalli Marichannegowda, Saini Setua, Meera Bose, Eric Sanders-Buell, David King, Michelle Zemil, Lindsay Wieczorek, Felisa Diaz-Mendez, Nicolas Chomont, Rasmi Thomas, Leilani Francisco, Leigh Anne Eller, Victoria R Polonis, Sodsai Tovanabutra, Yutaka Tagaya, Nelson L Michael, Merlin L Robb, Hongshuo Song
Nearly all transmitted/founder (T/F) HIV-1 are CCR5 (R5)-tropic. While previous evidence suggested that CXCR4 (X4)-tropic HIV-1 are transmissible, detection was not at the earliest stages of acute infection. Here, we identified an X4-tropic T/F HIV-1 in a participant in acute infection cohort. Coreceptor assays demonstrated that this T/F virus is strictly CXCR4 tropic. The participant experienced significantly faster CD4 depletion compared with R5 virus infected participants in the same cohort. Naïve and central memory CD4 subsets declined faster than effector and transitional memory subsets...
September 15, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37681957/transcription-start-site-heterogeneity-and-its-role-in-rna-fate-determination-distinguish-hiv-1-from-other-retroviruses-and-are-mediated-by-core-promoter-elements
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siarhei Kharytonchyk, Cleo Burnett, Keshav Gc, Alice Telesnitsky
HIV-1 uses heterogeneous transcription start sites (TSSs) to generate two RNA 5´ isoforms that adopt radically different structures and perform distinct replication functions. Although these RNAs differ in length by only two bases, exclusively, the shorter RNA is encapsidated while the longer RNA is excluded from virions and provides intracellular functions. The current study examined TSS usage and packaging selectivity for a broad range of retroviruses and found that heterogeneous TSS usage was a conserved feature of all tested HIV-1 strains, but all other retroviruses examined displayed unique TSSs...
September 8, 2023: Journal of Virology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37639012/monocytes-subsets-altered-distribution-and-dysregulated-plasma-hsa-mir-21-5p-and-hsa-mir-155-5p-in-hcv-linked-liver-cirrhosis-progression-to-hepatocellular-carcinoma
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Reham Hammad, Mona A Eldosoky, Asmaa A Elmadbouly, Reda Badr Aglan, Sherihan G AbdelHamid, Samy Zaky, Elham Ali, Fatma El-Zahraa Abd El Hakam, Alshaimaa M Mosaad, Neamat A Abdelmageed, Fatma M Kotb, Hend G Kotb, Ahmed A Hady, Omaima I Abo-Elkheir, Sandy Kujumdshiev, Ulrich Sack, Claude Lambert, Nadia M Hamdy
PURPOSE: The authors aim to investigate the altered monocytes subsets distribution in liver cirrhosis (LC) and subsequent hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in association with the expression level of plasma Homo sapiens (has)-miR-21-5p and hsa-miR-155-5p. A step toward non-protein coding (nc) RNA precision medicine based on the immune perturbation manifested as altered monocytes distribution, on top of LC and HCC. METHODS: Seventy-nine patients diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus (CHCV) infection with LC were enrolled in the current study...
August 28, 2023: Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37632020/molecular-population-genetics-of-aspen-mosaic-associated-virus-in-finland-and-sweden
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shaheen Nourinejhad Zarghani, Rim Al Kubrusli, Serghei Iancev, Risto Jalkanen, Carmen Büttner, Susanne von Bargen
Aspen mosaic-associated virus (AsMaV) is a newly identified Emaravirus , in the family Fimoviridae , Bunyavirales , associated with mosaic symptoms in aspen trees ( Populus tremula ). Aspen trees are widely distributed in Europe and understanding the population structure of AsMaV may aid in the development of better management strategies. The virus genome consists of five negative-sense single-stranded RNA (-ssRNA) molecules. To investigate the genetic diversity and population parameters of AsMaV, different regions of the genome were amplified and analyzed and full-length sequence of the divergent isolates were cloned and sequenced...
August 1, 2023: Viruses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37628824/enhancement-of-neutralization-responses-through-sequential-immunization-of-stable-env-trimers-based-on-consensus-sequences-from-select-time-points-by-mimicking-natural-infection
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mingming Wan, Xiao Yang, Jie Sun, Elena E Giorgi, Xue Ding, Yan Zhou, Yong Zhang, Weiheng Su, Chunlai Jiang, Yaming Shan, Feng Gao
HIV-1 vaccines have been challenging to develop, partly due to the high level of genetic variation in its genome. Thus, a vaccine that can induce cross-reactive neutralization activities will be needed. Studies on the co-evolution of antibodies and viruses indicate that mimicking the natural infection is likely to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). We generated the consensus Env sequence for each time point in subject CH505, who developed broad neutralization activities, and selected five critical time points before broad neutralization was detected...
August 10, 2023: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37563642/transmitted-founder-shiv-d-replicates-in-the-brain-causes-neuropathogenesis-and-persists-on-combination-antiretroviral-therapy-in-rhesus-macaques
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachel M Podgorski, Jake A Robinson, Mandy D Smith, Suvadip Mallick, Huaqing Zhao, Ronald S Veazey, Dennis L Kolson, Katharine J Bar, Tricia H Burdo
A biologically relevant non-human primate (NHP) model of HIV persistence in the central nervous system (CNS) is necessary. Most current NHP/SIV models of HIV infection fail to recapitulate viral persistence in the CNS without encephalitis or fail to employ viruses that authentically represent the ongoing HIV-1 pandemic. Here, we demonstrate viral replication in the brain and neuropathogenesis after combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) in rhesus macaques (RMs) using novel macrophage-tropic transmitted/founder (TF) simian-human immunodeficiency virus SHIV...
August 10, 2023: Retrovirology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37522010/genomic-epidemiology-of-dengue-in-shantou-china-2019
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lina Tian, Chumin Liang, Xiaorong Huang, Zhe Liu, Juan Su, Chuan Guo, Guanghu Zhu, Jiufeng Sun
OBJECTIVES: Dengue has been endemic in Southeast Asian countries for decades. There are few reports tracing the dynamics of dengue in real time. In this study, we generated hundreds of pathogen genomes to understand the genomic epidemiology of an outbreak in a hyper-endemic area of dengue. METHODS: We leveraged whole-genome short-read sequencing (PE150) to generate genomes of the dengue virus and investigated the genomic epidemiology of a dengue virus transmission in a mesoscale outbreak in Shantou, China, in 2019...
2023: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37515103/an-early-sars-cov-2-omicron-outbreak-in-a-dormitory-in-saint-petersburg-russia
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Galya V Klink, Daria Danilenko, Andrey B Komissarov, Nikita Yolshin, Olga Shneider, Sergey Shcherbak, Elena Nabieva, Nikita Shvyrev, Nadezhda Konovalova, Alyona Zheltukhina, Artem Fadeev, Kseniya Komissarova, Andrey Ksenafontov, Tamila Musaeva, Veronika Eder, Maria Pisareva, Petr Nekrasov, Vladimir Shchur, Georgii A Bazykin, Dmitry Lioznov
The Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 rapidly spread worldwide in late 2021-early 2022, displacing the previously prevalent Delta variant. Before 16 December 2021, community transmission had already been observed in tens of countries globally. However, in Russia, the majority of reported cases at that time had been sporadic and associated with travel. Here, we report an Omicron outbreak at a student dormitory in Saint Petersburg between 16-29 December 2021, which was the earliest known instance of a large-scale community transmission in Russia...
June 22, 2023: Viruses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37491352/genetically-diverse-mouse-models-of-sars-cov-2-infection-reproduce-clinical-variation-in-type-i-interferon-and-cytokine-responses-in-covid-19
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shelly J Robertson, Olivia Bedard, Kristin L McNally, Carl Shaia, Chad S Clancy, Matthew Lewis, Rebecca M Broeckel, Abhilash I Chiramel, Jeffrey G Shannon, Gail L Sturdevant, Rebecca Rosenke, Sarah L Anzick, Elvira Forte, Christoph Preuss, Candice N Baker, Jeffrey M Harder, Catherine Brunton, Steven Munger, Daniel P Bruno, Justin B Lack, Jacqueline M Leung, Amirhossein Shamsaddini, Paul Gardina, Daniel E Sturdevant, Jian Sun, Craig Martens, Steven M Holland, Nadia A Rosenthal, Sonja M Best
Inflammation in response to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection drives severity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and is influenced by host genetics. To understand mechanisms of inflammation, animal models that reflect genetic diversity and clinical outcomes observed in humans are needed. We report a mouse panel comprising the genetically diverse Collaborative Cross (CC) founder strains crossed to human ACE2 transgenic mice (K18-hACE2) that confers susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2...
July 25, 2023: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37399208/adaptation-of-a-transmitted-founder-simian-human-immunodeficiency-virus-for-enhanced-replication-in-rhesus-macaques
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anya Bauer, Emily Lindemuth, Francesco Elia Marino, Ryan Krause, Jaimy Joy, Steffen S Docken, Suvadip Mallick, Kevin McCormick, Clinton Holt, Ivelin Georgiev, Barbara Felber, Brandon F Keele, Ronald Veazey, Miles P Davenport, Hui Li, George M Shaw, Katharine J Bar
Transmitted/founder (TF) simian-human immunodeficiency viruses (SHIVs) express HIV-1 envelopes modified at position 375 to efficiently infect rhesus macaques while preserving authentic HIV-1 Env biology. SHIV.C.CH505 is an extensively characterized virus encoding the TF HIV-1 Env CH505 mutated at position 375 shown to recapitulate key features of HIV-1 immunobiology, including CCR5-tropism, a tier 2 neutralization profile, reproducible early viral kinetics, and authentic immune responses. SHIV.C.CH505 is used frequently in nonhuman primate studies of HIV, but viral loads after months of infection are variable and typically lower than those in people living with HIV...
July 3, 2023: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37384622/antigen-pressure-from-two-founder-viruses-induces-multiple-insertions-at-a-single-antibody-position-to-generate-broadly-neutralizing-hiv-antibodies
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Collin Joyce, Sasha Murrell, Ben Murrell, Oluwarotimi Omorodion, Lorena S Ver, Nancy Carrico, Raiza Bastidas, Rebecca Nedellec, Michael Bick, Jordan Woehl, Fangzhu Zhao, Alison Burns, Shawn Barman, Michael Appel, Alejandra Ramos, Lalinda Wickramasinghe, Kemal Eren, Thomas Vollbrecht, Davey M Smith, Sergei L Kosakovsky Pond, Ryan McBride, Charli Worth, Facundo Batista, Devin Sok, Pascal Poignard, Bryan Briney, Ian A Wilson, Elise Landais, Dennis R Burton
Vaccination strategies aimed at maturing broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) from naïve precursors are hindered by unusual features that characterize these Abs, including insertions and deletions (indels). Longitudinal studies of natural HIV infection cases shed light on the complex processes underlying bnAb development and have suggested a role for superinfection as a potential enhancer of neutralization breadth. Here we describe the development of a potent bnAb lineage that was elicited by two founder viruses to inform vaccine design...
June 2023: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37310124/louis-pasteur-the-life-of-a-controversial-scientist-with-a-prepared-mind-driven-by-curiosity-motivation-and-competition
#33
EDITORIAL
Carl-Henrik Brogren
Louis Pasteur, born December 27, 1822 in Dole, France, showed in his childhood and youth great abilities as an artistic painter; however by an age of 19, his interest changed toward science, and he moved to Paris to study chemistry and physics at École Normale Supérieure. During graduation, he initiated research on chiral crystallography and stereochemistry and got his doctorates in 1847 in both chemistry and physics. In 1848, he started as high school teacher in Dijon, but shortly after he became a deputy professor at the University of Strasbourg in chemistry and got married to the rector's daughter Marie Laurent...
June 13, 2023: APMIS: Acta Pathologica, Microbiologica, et Immunologica Scandinavica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37307292/genetic-variation-of-the-hiv-1-subtype-c-transmitted-founder-viruses-long-terminal-repeat-elements-and-the-impact-on-transcription-activation-potential-and-clinical-disease-outcomes
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paradise Madlala, Zakithi Mkhize, Shamara Naicker, Samukelisiwe P Khathi, Shreyal Maikoo, Kasmira Gopee, Krista L Dong, Thumbi Ndung'u
A genetic bottleneck is a hallmark of HIV-1 transmission such that only very few viral strains, termed transmitted/founder (T/F) variants establish infection in a newly infected host. Phenotypic characteristics of these variants may determine the subsequent course of disease. The HIV-1 5' long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter drives viral gene transcription and is genetically identical to the 3' LTR. We hypothesized that HIV-1 subtype C (HIV-1C) T/F virus LTR genetic variation is a determinant of transcriptional activation potential and clinical disease outcome...
June 12, 2023: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37292892/transcription-start-site-heterogeneity-and-its-role-in-rna-fate-determination-distinguish-hiv-1-from-other-retroviruses-and-are-mediated-by-core-promoter-elements
#35
Siarhei Kharytonchyk, Cleo Burnett, Keshav Gc, Alice Telesnitsky
HIV-1 uses heterogeneous transcription start sites (TSSs) to generate two RNA 5' isoforms that adopt radically different structures and perform distinct replication functions. Although these RNAs differ in length by only two bases, exclusively the shorter RNA is encapsidated while the longer RNA is excluded from virions and provides intracellular functions. The current study examined TSS usage and packaging selectivity for a broad range of retroviruses and found that heterogenous TSS usage was a conserved feature of all tested HIV-1 strains, but all other retroviruses examined displayed unique TSSs...
May 22, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37243298/foundation-of-the-belgian-society-for-viruses-of-microbes-and-meeting-report-of-its-inaugural-symposium
#36
Agnieszka Latka, Abram Aertsen, Dimitri Boeckaerts, Bob Blasdel, Pieter-Jan Ceyssens, Abel Garcia-Pino, Annika Gillis, Rob Lavigne, Gipsi Lima-Mendez, Jelle Matthijnssens, Jolien Onsea, Eveline Peeters, Jean-Paul Pirnay, Damien Thiry, Dieter Vandenheuvel, Els Van Mechelen, Jolien Venneman, Gilbert Verbeken, Jeroen Wagemans, Yves Briers
The Belgian Society for Viruses of Microbes (BSVoM) was founded on 9 June 2022 to capture and enhance the collaborative spirit among the expanding community of microbial virus researchers in Belgium. The sixteen founders are affiliated to fourteen different research entities across academia, industry and government. Its inaugural symposium was held on 23 September 2022 in the Thermotechnical Institute at KU Leuven. The meeting program covered three thematic sessions launched by international keynote speakers: (1) virus-host interactions, (2) viral ecology, evolution and diversity and (3) present and future applications...
May 22, 2023: Viruses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37084644/generation-and-characterization-of-infectious-molecular-clones-of-transmitted-founder-hiv-1-subtype-c-viruses
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bonisile Luthuli, Kamini Gounder, Martin J Deymier, Krista L Dong, Alejandro B Balazs, Jaclyn K Mann, Thumbi Ndung'u
The genetic diversity of HIV impedes vaccine development. Identifying the viral properties of transmitted/founder (T/F) variants may provide a common vaccine target. To study the biological nature of T/F viruses, we constructed full-length clones from women detected during Fiebig stage I acute HIV-1 infection (AHI) from heterosexual male-to-female (MTF) transmission; and clones after one year of infection using In-Fusion-based cloning. Eighteen full-length T/F clones were generated from 9 women and six chronic infection clones were from 2 individuals...
April 10, 2023: Virology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36999552/the-influence-of-explicit-local-dynamics-on-range-expansions-driven-by-long-range-dispersal
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nathan Villiger, Jayson Paulose
Range expansions are common in natural populations. They can take such forms as an invasive species spreading into a new habitat or a virus spreading from host to host during a pandemic. When the expanding species is capable of dispersing offspring over long distances, population growth is driven by rare but consequential long-range dispersal events that seed satellite colonies far from the densely occupied core of the population. These satellites accelerate growth by accessing unoccupied territory, and also act as reservoirs for maintaining neutral genetic variation present in the originating population, which would ordinarily be lost to drift...
March 31, 2023: G3: Genes—Genomes—Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36990305/signatures-of-natural-selection-in-tree-topology-shape-of-serially-sampled-viral-phylogenies
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lucia P Barzilai, Carlos G Schrago
Tree shape metrics can be computed fast for trees of any size, which makes them promising alternatives to intensive statistical methods and parameter-rich evolutionary models in the era of massive data availability. Previous studies have demonstrated their effectiveness in unveiling important parameters in viral evolutionary dynamics, although the impact of natural selection on the shape of tree topologies has not been thoroughly investigated. We carried out a forward-time and individual-based simulation to investigate whether tree shape metrics of several kinds could predict the selection regime employed to generate the data...
March 27, 2023: Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36883860/isolation-of-an-ecotropic-porcine-endogenous-retrovirus-perv-c-from-a-yucatan-sla-d-d-inbred-miniature-swine
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Rodrigues Costa, Nicole Fischer, Antonia Gronewold, Barbara Gulich, Antonia W Godehardt, Ralf R Tönjes
Xenotransplantation may compensate the limited number of human allografts for transplantation using pigs as organ donors. Porcine endogenous retroviruses inherit infectious potential if pig cells, tissues, or organs were transplanted to immunosuppressed human recipients. Particularly, ecotropic PERV-C that could recombine with PERV-A to highly replication-competent human-tropic PERV-A/C should be excluded from pig breeds designed for xenotransplantation. Because of their low proviral background, SLAD/D (SLA, swine leukocyte antigen) haplotype pigs are potential candidates as organ donors as they do not bear replication-competent PERV-A and -B, even if they carry PERV-C...
March 8, 2023: Journal of Virology
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