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Genetic Stability of Human T Lymphotropic Virus Type I despite Antiviral Pressures by CTLs
Author(s) -
Ryuji Kubota,
Kousuke Hanada,
Yoshitaka Furukawa,
Kimiyoshi Arimura,
Mitsuhiro Osame,
Takashi Gojobori,
Shuji Izumo
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.178.9.5966
Subject(s) - ctl* , biology , virology , epitope , nonsynonymous substitution , virus , tropical spastic paraparesis , gene , viral replication , genetics , reassortment , cytotoxic t cell , antibody , disease , myelopathy , medicine , in vitro , infectious disease (medical specialty) , genome , neuroscience , spinal cord , covid-19 , pathology
Human T lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I)-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) is an inflammatory neurological disease. Patients with HAM/TSP show high proviral load despite increased HTLV-I Tax-specific CTL. It is still unknown whether the CTL efficiently eliminate the virus in vivo and/or whether a naturally occurring variant virus becomes predominant by escaping from the CTL. To address these issues, we sequenced a large number of HTLV-I tax genes from HLA-A*02 HAM/TSP patients and estimated synonymous and nonsynonymous changes of the genes to detect positive selection pressure on the virus. We found the pressures in three of six CTL epitopes in HTLV-I Tax, where amino acid substitutions preferentially occurred. Although some of variant viruses were not recognized by the CTL, no variant viruses accumulated within 3-8 years, indicating genetic stability of HTLV-I tax gene. These results suggest that CTL eliminate the infected cells in vivo and naturally occurring variant viruses do not predominate. As Tax is a regulatory protein which controls viral replication, the amino acid substitutions in Tax may reduce viral fitness for replication. Viral fitness and host immune response may contribute to the viral evolution within the infected individuals. Furthermore, the genetic stability in the epitopes despite the antiviral pressures suggests that the three epitopes can be the candidate targets for HTLV-I vaccine development.

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