HIV Progression Depends on Codon and Amino Acid Usage Profile of Envelope Protein and Associated Host-Genetic Influence
Abstract
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a spectrum of conditions caused by
infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Two types of HIV have been
characterized: HIV-1 and HIV-2. The present study investigated whether evolutionary
selection pressure differs between rapid progressor (RP), slow progressor (SP), and
long-term non-progressor (LTNP) of HIV-I infected individuals. An unexpected association
between the evolutionary rate of substitution in envelope (env) gene and disease
progression is observed. Our present study suggests that env genes of LTNP are subject
to unusually strong functional constraint with respect to RP. We also observed that the
three categories of env genes i.e., RP, SP, and LTNP, had their own characteristic pattern
of amino acid usage and SP and LTNP sequences shared similar patterns of amino
acid usage different from RP sequences and evolutionary rate significantly influenced
the amino acid usage pattern of the three different types of env gene sequences. It
was also noted that the evolutionary rate for the glycosylation sites of LTNP and SP
sequences were even significantly less than the RP sequences. Comparative analysis
on the influence of human host on the three categories of env genes are well correlated
with the rates of disease progression suggesting the adaptive strategies of the viruses
for successful residence and infection. Host associated selective constraints appeared
most relaxed on the RP sequences and strongest in LTNP sequences. The present study
clearly portrays how evolutionary selection pressure differs between three categories of
env genes i.e., RP, SP, and LTNP. The env genes, coding for the env glycoproteins,
experience severe selection constraints from the host due to their constant exposure
to the host immune system. In this perspective it might be suggested that env gene
evolution occurs mainly by negative selection with the occurrence of mutation that might
not reach fixation in the viral population. This work also confers a deeper insight into the
crucial effects of host factors that govern the overall progression of HIV infection.
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