Virology. 2000 Jul 5;272(2):326-30. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
Wide differences exist among primary isolates of HIV-1 in their
sensitivity to antibody-mediated neutralization. While it is well
documented that even short-term tissue culture amplification of HIV-1
leads to a reduction in the genetic diversity of the viral quasispecies
seen in vivo, viral isolates, while relatively homogeneous, are
generally not clonal. We investigated whether the extent of genetic
diversity within primary viral isolates correlates with their general
susceptibility to neutralization. We compared the number of V1V2 and
V3-V5 envelope variants detectable within 16 primary isolates selected
to represent the extremes of the neutralization sensitive and resistant
phenotypes. Using DNA heteroduplex tracking assays to estimate the
extent of genetic diversity in these two regions of the envelope locus,
we found that these primary isolates were made up of one to five
distinguishable V1V2 and V3-V5 sequence variants. We found that higher
levels of env genetic diversity did not correlate with increased
resistance to antibody neutralization. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.
JOURNAL ARTICLE Comparative Study Human HIV Antibodies/*PHYSIOLOGY
HIV Infections/GENETICS/IMMUNOLOGY HIV
Seropositivity/GENETICS/IMMUNOLOGY
HIV-1/*GENETICS/IMMUNOLOGY/*ISOLATION & PURIF Neutralization Tests
Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/GENETICS Phenotype Sensitivity and
Specificity Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
*Variation (Genetics)
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