Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.

HIV-1 infection is complicated by high rates of opportunistic infections against which specific antibodies contribute to immune defense. Antibody function depends on somatic hypermutation (SHM) of variable regions of immunoglobulin heavy chain genes (VH-D-J). We characterized the frequency of SHM in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elisabeth Bowers, Ronald W Scamurra, Anil Asrani, Lydie Beniguel, Samantha MaWhinney, Kathryne M Keays, Joseph R Thurn, Edward N Janoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3883639?pdf=render
id doaj-e4f633daacc142128018c7c13907ffc7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e4f633daacc142128018c7c13907ffc72020-11-25T00:04:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0191e8191310.1371/journal.pone.0081913Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.Elisabeth BowersRonald W ScamurraAnil AsraniLydie BeniguelSamantha MaWhinneyKathryne M KeaysJoseph R ThurnEdward N JanoffHIV-1 infection is complicated by high rates of opportunistic infections against which specific antibodies contribute to immune defense. Antibody function depends on somatic hypermutation (SHM) of variable regions of immunoglobulin heavy chain genes (VH-D-J). We characterized the frequency of SHM in expressed IgG mRNA immunoglobulin transcripts from control and HIV-1-infected patients.We compared utilization of genes in the most prominent VH family (VH3) and mutation frequencies and patterns of cDNA from VH3-IgG genes from 10 seronegative control subjects and 21 patients with HIV-1 infection (6 without and 15 patients with detectable plasma viremia).Unique IgG VH3 family cDNA sequences (n = 1,565) were PCR amplified, cloned, and sequenced from blood. Sequences were analyzed using online (Vbase) and in-house immunoglobulin alignment resources.Mutation frequencies in the antigen-binding hypervariable complementarity determining regions (CDR1/2) of IgG class-switched B cells were lower among viremic HIV-1-infected patients vs. controls for nucleotides (CDR1/2: 10±5% vs. 13.5±6%, p = 0.03) and amino acids (CDR: 20%±10 vs. 25%±12, p = 0.02) and in structural framework regions. Mutation patterns were similar among groups. The most common VH3 gene, VH3-23, was utilized less frequently among viremic HIV-1-infected patients (p = 0.03), and overall, mutation frequencies were decreased in nearly all VH3 genes compared with controls.B cells from HIV-1-infected patients show decreased mutation frequencies, especially in antigen-binding VH3 CDR genes, and selective defects in gene utilization. Similar mutation patterns suggest defects in the quantity, but not quality, of mutator activity. Lower levels of SHM in IgG class-switched B cells from HIV-1-infected patients may contribute to the increased risk of opportunistic infections and impaired humoral responses to preventative vaccines.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3883639?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisabeth Bowers
Ronald W Scamurra
Anil Asrani
Lydie Beniguel
Samantha MaWhinney
Kathryne M Keays
Joseph R Thurn
Edward N Janoff
spellingShingle Elisabeth Bowers
Ronald W Scamurra
Anil Asrani
Lydie Beniguel
Samantha MaWhinney
Kathryne M Keays
Joseph R Thurn
Edward N Janoff
Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elisabeth Bowers
Ronald W Scamurra
Anil Asrani
Lydie Beniguel
Samantha MaWhinney
Kathryne M Keays
Joseph R Thurn
Edward N Janoff
author_sort Elisabeth Bowers
title Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
title_short Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
title_full Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
title_fullStr Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
title_full_unstemmed Decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin G variable region genes during viremic HIV-1 infection.
title_sort decreased mutation frequencies among immunoglobulin g variable region genes during viremic hiv-1 infection.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description HIV-1 infection is complicated by high rates of opportunistic infections against which specific antibodies contribute to immune defense. Antibody function depends on somatic hypermutation (SHM) of variable regions of immunoglobulin heavy chain genes (VH-D-J). We characterized the frequency of SHM in expressed IgG mRNA immunoglobulin transcripts from control and HIV-1-infected patients.We compared utilization of genes in the most prominent VH family (VH3) and mutation frequencies and patterns of cDNA from VH3-IgG genes from 10 seronegative control subjects and 21 patients with HIV-1 infection (6 without and 15 patients with detectable plasma viremia).Unique IgG VH3 family cDNA sequences (n = 1,565) were PCR amplified, cloned, and sequenced from blood. Sequences were analyzed using online (Vbase) and in-house immunoglobulin alignment resources.Mutation frequencies in the antigen-binding hypervariable complementarity determining regions (CDR1/2) of IgG class-switched B cells were lower among viremic HIV-1-infected patients vs. controls for nucleotides (CDR1/2: 10±5% vs. 13.5±6%, p = 0.03) and amino acids (CDR: 20%±10 vs. 25%±12, p = 0.02) and in structural framework regions. Mutation patterns were similar among groups. The most common VH3 gene, VH3-23, was utilized less frequently among viremic HIV-1-infected patients (p = 0.03), and overall, mutation frequencies were decreased in nearly all VH3 genes compared with controls.B cells from HIV-1-infected patients show decreased mutation frequencies, especially in antigen-binding VH3 CDR genes, and selective defects in gene utilization. Similar mutation patterns suggest defects in the quantity, but not quality, of mutator activity. Lower levels of SHM in IgG class-switched B cells from HIV-1-infected patients may contribute to the increased risk of opportunistic infections and impaired humoral responses to preventative vaccines.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3883639?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT elisabethbowers decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT ronaldwscamurra decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT anilasrani decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT lydiebeniguel decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT samanthamawhinney decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT kathrynemkeays decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT josephrthurn decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
AT edwardnjanoff decreasedmutationfrequenciesamongimmunoglobulingvariableregiongenesduringviremichiv1infection
_version_ 1725428235170217984