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Functional properties of the HIV-1 subtype C envelope glycoprotein associated with mother-to-child transmission
Authors:Hong Zhang  Marzena Rola  John T. West  Piotr Kubis  Jun He  Chipepo Kankasa
Affiliation:a Nebraska Center for Virology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, USA
b The School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, USA
c University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA
d Department of Pediatrics, University Teaching Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia
Abstract:Understanding the properties of viruses capable of establishing infection during perinatal transmission of HIV-1 is critical for designing effective means of limiting transmission. We previously demonstrated that the newly transmitted viruses (in infant) were more fit in growth, as imparted by their envelope glycoproteins, than those in their corresponding mothers. Here, we further characterized the viral envelope glycoproteins from six mother-infant transmission pairs and determined whether any specific envelope functions correlate with HIV-1 subtype C perinatal transmission. We found that most newly transmitted viruses were less susceptible to neutralization by their maternal plasma compared to contemporaneous maternal viruses. However, the newly transmitted variants were sensitive to neutralization by pooled heterologous plasma but in general were resistant to IgG1 b12. Neither Env processing nor incorporation efficiency was predictive of viral transmissibility. These findings provide further insight into the characteristics of perinatally transmissible HIV-1 and may have implications for intervention approaches.
Keywords:HIV-1 subtype C   Perinatal transmission   Envelope glycoproteins   Neutralization   Autologous or heterologous antibodies   Envelope processing and incorporation
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