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HIV-2 Integrase Polymorphisms and Longitudinal Genotypic Analysis of HIV-2 Infected Patients Failing a Raltegravir-Containing Regimen
Author(s) -
Joana Cavaco-Silva,
Ana Abecasis,
Ana Cláudia Miranda,
José Poças,
Jorge Narciso,
Maria João Águas,
Fernando Maltêz,
Isabel Almeida,
Isabel Germano,
António Diniz,
Maria de Fátima Gonçalves,
Perpétua Gómes,
Celso Cunha,
Ricardo Camacho,
on behalf of the Portuguese HIV- Resistance Study Group
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0092747
Subject(s) - raltegravir , integrase , integrase inhibitor , dolutegravir , virology , elvitegravir , population , regimen , biology , genotype , genetics , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , medicine , viral load , gene , antiretroviral therapy , environmental health
To characterize the HIV-2 integrase gene polymorphisms and the pathways to resistance of HIV-2 patients failing a raltegravir-containing regimen, we studied 63 integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTI)-naïve patients, and 10 heavily pretreated patients exhibiting virological failure while receiving a salvage raltegravir-containing regimen. All patients were infected by HIV-2 group A. 61.4% of the integrase residues were conserved, including the catalytic motif residues. No INSTI-major resistance mutations were detected in the virus population from naïve patients, but two amino acids that are secondary resistance mutations to INSTIs in HIV-1 were observed. The 10 raltegravir-experienced patients exhibited resistance mutations via three main genetic pathways: N155H, Q148R, and eventually E92Q - T97A. The 155 pathway was preferentially used (7/10 patients). Other mutations associated to raltegravir resistance in HIV-1 were also observed in our HIV-2 population (V151I and D232N), along with several novel mutations previously unreported. Data retrieved from this study should help build a more robust HIV-2-specific algorithm for the genotypic interpretation of raltegravir resistance, and contribute to improve the clinical monitoring of HIV-2-infected patients.

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