logo

VetSRev

Variation in Intra-individual Lentiviral Evolution Rates: a Systematic Review of Human, Nonhuman Primate, and Felid Species

Krakoff, E. and Gagne, R. B. and VandeWoude, S. and Carver, S.

J Virol (2019) 93:

DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00538-19

Abstract

Lentiviral replication mediated by reverse transcriptase is considered to be highly error prone, leading to a high intra-individual evolution rate that promotes evasion of neutralization and persistent infection. Understanding lentiviral intra-individual evolutionary dynamics on a comparative basis can therefore inform research strategies to aid in studies of pathogenesis, vaccine design, and therapeutic intervention. We conducted a systematic review of intra-individual evolution rates for three species groups of lentiviruses-feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Overall, intra-individual rate estimates differed by virus but not by host, gene, or viral strain. Lentiviral infections in spillover (nonadapted) hosts approximated infections in primary (adapted) hosts. Our review consistently documents that FIV evolution rates within individuals are significantly lower than the rates recorded for HIV and SIV. FIV intra-individual evolution rates were noted to be equivalent to FIV interindividual rates. These findings document inherent differences in the evolution of FIV relative to that of primate lentiviruses, which may signal intrinsic difference of reverse transcriptase between these viral species or different host-viral interactions. Analysis of lentiviral evolutionary selection pressures at the individual versus population level is valuable for understanding transmission dynamics and the emergence of virulent and avirulent strains and provides novel insight for approaches to interrupt lentiviral infections.IMPORTANCE To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study that compares intra-individual evolution rates for FIV, SIV, and HIV following systematic review of the literature. Our findings have important implications for informing research strategies in the field of intra-individual virus dynamics for lentiviruses. We observed that FIV evolves more slowly than HIV and SIV at the intra-individual level and found that mutation rates may differ by gene sequence length but not by host, gene, strain, an experimental setting relative to a natural setting, or spillover host infection relative to primary host infection.

Citation

Krakoff, E., Gagne, R. B., VandeWoude, S., & Carver, S. (2019). Variation in Intra-individual Lentiviral Evolution Rates: a Systematic Review of Human, Nonhuman Primate, and Felid Species. J Virol, 93(16). https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00538-19 Animals, Humans, Primates, Cats, Genetic Variation, *human immunodeficiency virus, *Host-Pathogen Interactions, *Biological Evolution, *evolution rate, *feline immunodeficiency virus, *lentivirus, *simian immunodeficiency virus, Evolution, Molecular, Feline Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/virology, HIV Infections/virology, HIV/genetics, Immunodeficiency Virus, Feline/genetics, Lentivirus Infections/*virology, Lentivirus/classification/*physiology, Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/virology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus/genetics

Keywords