Growth Dominance of a Revertant Virus Generated during in Vitro Serial Passage of nef Frameshift Mutant of HIV-1
Authors: Fujinaga K.; Nakamura Y.; Zhong Q.; Nakaya T.; Ikuta K.
Source: Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Volume 229, Number 1, December 1996 , pp. 96-101(6)
Publisher: Academic Press
Abstract:
We prepared a series of nef mutant HIV-1 with a frameshift mutation at the Xho I site by up to 50 serial transfers into MT-4 cells. Here, we studied revertants. Immunofluorescence using an anti-Nef monoclonal antibody revealed that cells first became Nef antigen-positive at the 23rd passage. The percentage of Nef antigen-positive cells gradually increased and reached almost 100% by the 27th passage. The sequence of the provirus in the cells supported the generation of a revertant. This revertant mutated at the site immediately after the initially introduced frameshift mutation. This resulted in the substitution of only three amino acids and the insertion of two, which restored the proline-rich domain, a conserved region believed essential to viral replication, at the middle of Nef. Thus, the growth dominance of the revertant virus, compared with the original nef mutant, was directly demonstrated in vitro using serial passages consisting of mixed HIV-1 populations in a single cell.
Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: Institute of Immunological Science, Hokkaido University, Kita-ku, Sapporo, 060, Japan:

Click here for Page Help