Journal article
Different regions of HIV-1 subtype C env are associated with placental localization and in utero mother-to-child transmission
SB Kumar, SK Handelman, I Voronkin, V Mwapasa, D Janies, SJ Rogerson, SR Meshnick, JJ Kwiek
Journal of Virology | Published : 2011
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01955-10
Abstract
HIV infections are initiated by a limited number of variants that diverge into a diverse quasispecies swarm. During in utero mother-to-child transmission (IU MTCT), transmitted viral variants must pass through multiple unique environments, and our previously published data suggest a nonstochastic model of transmission. As an alternative to a stochastic model of viral transmission, we hypothesize that viral selection in the placental environment influences the character of the viral quasispecies when HIV-1 is transmitted in utero. To test this hypothesis, we used single-template amplification to isolate HIV-1 envelope gene (env) sequences from both peripheral plasma and the placentas of eight..
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Awarded by National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Funding Acknowledgements
This project was supported in part by NIH grants K99-HD056586 and R00HD056586 to J.J.K. and R01-AI49084 and R21-AI065369 to S.R.M. S.J.R. was supported by Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellowship number 063215. We acknowledge that this material is based upon work supported by, or in part by, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and Office under grant number W911NF-05-1-0271 (D.J.). This material is also based upon work partially supported by the OSU Mathematical Biosciences Institute (National Science Foundation grant 0635561 to S. K. H.).