Dissecting HIV Virulence: Heritability of Setpoint Viral Load, CD4+ T-Cell Decline, and Per-Parasite Pathogenicity.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C087F60FDD69
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Dissecting HIV Virulence: Heritability of Setpoint Viral Load, CD4+ T-Cell Decline, and Per-Parasite Pathogenicity.
Journal
Molecular biology and evolution
Author(s)
Bertels F., Marzel A., Leventhal G., Mitov V., Fellay J., Günthard H.F., Böni J., Yerly S., Klimkait T., Aubert V., Battegay M., Rauch A., Cavassini M., Calmy A., Bernasconi E., Schmid P., Scherrer A.U., Müller V., Bonhoeffer S., Kouyos R., Regoes R.R.
Working group(s)
Swiss HIV Cohort Study
ISSN
1537-1719 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0737-4038
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/01/2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
35
Number
1
Pages
27-37
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Pathogen strains may differ in virulence because they attain different loads in their hosts, or because they induce different disease-causing mechanisms independent of their load. In evolutionary ecology, the latter is referred to as "per-parasite pathogenicity". Using viral load and CD4+ T-cell measures from 2014 HIV-1 subtype B-infected individuals enrolled in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study, we investigated if virulence-measured as the rate of decline of CD4+ T cells-and per-parasite pathogenicity are heritable from donor to recipient. We estimated heritability by donor-recipient regressions applied to 196 previously identified transmission pairs, and by phylogenetic mixed models applied to a phylogenetic tree inferred from HIV pol sequences. Regressing the CD4+ T-cell declines and per-parasite pathogenicities of the transmission pairs did not yield heritability estimates significantly different from zero. With the phylogenetic mixed model, however, our best estimate for the heritability of the CD4+ T-cell decline is 17% (5-30%), and that of the per-parasite pathogenicity is 17% (4-29%). Further, we confirm that the set-point viral load is heritable, and estimate a heritability of 29% (12-46%). Interestingly, the pattern of evolution of all these traits differs significantly from neutrality, and is most consistent with stabilizing selection for the set-point viral load, and with directional selection for the CD4+ T-cell decline and the per-parasite pathogenicity. Our analysis shows that the viral genotype affects virulence mainly by modulating the per-parasite pathogenicity, while the indirect effect via the set-point viral load is minor.
Keywords
Adult, CD4 Lymphocyte Count/methods, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/pathology, Cohort Studies, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections/transmission, HIV-1/genetics, Humans, Male, Phenotype, Phylogeny, Viral Load/methods, Virulence, HIV, disease tolerance, evolution of virulence, heritability, per-parasite pathogenicity
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
26/10/2017 14:56
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:35
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