Nature. 1988 Aug 4;334(6181):444-7. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
AIDS is a disorder characterized by a slow progressive impairment of
immune function and by infection of human immunodeficiency viruses
(HIV-1, HIV-2). Our knowledge of how these viruses cause disease in man,
or how the related lentiviruses (visna and equine infectious anaemia
virus) cause disease in animals, is still fragmentary. In particular,
the significance of genetic variation in HIV-1, occurring within
populations, within individuals and over periods of time, and the
mechanisms of viral persistence remain unclear. To address these issues
we prepared a series of proviral clones of HIV-1 originating from a
single patient and compared their biological properties. Here we show
that hybrid genomes (in which the envelope region of six viral clones
were separately substituted into a prototype HIV-1 genome) generated
viruses with widely differing capacity to grow in human T cells, cell
lines and monocytoid cultures. These data suggest that extensive
biological variation exists in vivo within an infected individual and is
in part determined at the level of the viral envelope.
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/GENETICS/MICROBIOLOGY Base Sequence
DNA Restriction Enzymes/METABOLISM DNA, Viral/ANALYSIS Human
HIV/*GENETICS/PHYSIOLOGY Male Proviruses/GENETICS Transfection Viral
Envelope Proteins/GENETICS Virus Replication JOURNAL ARTICLE
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