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Relative rate and location of intra-host HIV evolution to evade cellular immunity are predictable.

Abstract:
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves within infected persons to escape being destroyed by the host immune system, thereby preventing effective immune control of infection. Here, we combine methods from evolutionary dynamics and statistical physics to simulate in vivo HIV sequence evolution, predicting the relative rate of escape and the location of escape mutations in response to T-cell-mediated immune pressure in a cohort of 17 persons with acute HIV infection. Predicted and clinically observed times to escape immune responses agree well, and we show that the mutational pathways to escape depend on the viral sequence background due to epistatic interactions. The ability to predict escape pathways and the duration over which control is maintained by specific immune responses open the door to rational design of immunotherapeutic strategies that might enable long-term control of HIV infection. Our approach enables intra-host evolution of a human pathogen to be predicted in a probabilistic framework.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1038/ncomms11660

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
Target Discovery Institute
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Nature Publishing Group
Journal:
Nature Communications More from this journal
Volume:
7
Pages:
11660
Publication date:
2016-05-01
Acceptance date:
2016-04-18
DOI:
EISSN:
2041-1723
Pmid:
27212475


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:624989
UUID:
uuid:2099466a-abcb-4ea6-ad6b-4a87580e0419
Local pid:
pubs:624989
Source identifiers:
624989
Deposit date:
2017-09-08

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