The prediction of the coreceptor usage of HIV-1 is required for the administration of a new class of antiretroviral drugs, i.e. coreceptor antagonists. It can be performed by sequence analysis of the env gene and subsequent interpretation through an internet based interpretation system (geno2pheno[coreceptor]).
Maraviroc (MVC) is the first licensed antiretroviral drug from the class of coreceptor antagonists. It binds to the host coreceptor CCR5, which is used by the majority of HIV strains in order to infect the human immune cells (Fig. 1). Other HIV isolates use a different coreceptor, the CXCR4. Which receptor is used, is determined in the virus by the Env protein (Fig. 2). Depending on the coreceptor used, the viruses are classified as R5 or X4, respectively. MVC binds to the CCR5 receptor inhibiting the entry of R5 viruses into the target cell. During the course of disease, X4 viruses may emerge and outgrow the R5 viruses. Determination of coreceptor usage (also called tropism) is therefore mandatory prior to administration of MVC, as demanded by EMA and FDA.
The studies for MVC efficiency MOTIVATE, MERIT and 1029 have been performed with the Trofile assay from Monogram, San Francisco, U.S.A. This is a high quality assay based on sophisticated recombinant tests. The acceptance for this test for daily routine is rather low outside of the U.S.A., since the European physicians rather tend to work with decentralized expert laboratories, which also provide concomitant resistance testing. These laboratories have undergone several quality assurance evaluations, the last one being presented in 20111.
For several years now, we have performed tropism determinations based on sequence analysis from the HIV env-V3 gene region (V3)2. This region carries enough information to perform a reliable prediction. The genotypic determination of coreceptor usage presents advantages such as: shorter turnover time (equivalent to resistance testing), lower costs, possibility to adapt the results to the patients’ needs and possibility of analysing clinical samples with very low or even undetectable viral load (VL), particularly since the number of samples analysed with VL<1000 copies/μl roughly increased in the last years (Fig. 3).
The main steps for tropism testing (Fig. 4) demonstrated in this video:
1. Collection of a blood sample
2. Isolation of the HIV RNA from the plasma and/or HIV proviral DNA from blood mononuclear cells
3. Amplification of the env region
4. Amplification of the V3 region
5. Sequence reaction of the V3 amplicon
6. Purification of the sequencing samples
7. Sequencing the purified samples
8. Sequence editing
9. Sequencing data interpretation and tropism prediction
The protocol is summarized in Fig. 4.
1. Collection of blood samples
2. Isolation of HIV RNA and/or DNA
3. Amplification of the env region
Amplify the env region (Figs. 2 and 4) from either plasma RNA or proviral DNA. A 1245 bp-long product, comprising the majority of the Env protein (nt 6556-7811 according to HXB2) is generated.
volume/reaction (μl) | final concentration | |
RNase-free H2O | 14.4 | |
5x Buffer (Qiagen OneStep RT-PCR Kit) | 10 | 1x |
5x Q-Solution | 10 | 1x |
dNTP Mix (10 mM each) | 2 | 400 μM of each dNTP |
Enzym-Mix (Qiagen OneStep RT-PCR Kit) | 2 | |
Primer Env-F (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
Primer Env-R (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
RNase Inhibitor (RNasin) | 1 | 5 units/reaction |
95°C, 15min | 1 x |
95°C, 30 sec 50°C, 30 sec 72°C, 2 min |
1 x |
95°C, 30 sec 56°C, 30 sec 72°C, 2 min |
38 x |
72°C, 10 min 4°C ∞ |
volume/reaction (μl) | final concentration | |
RNase-free H2O | 15.4 | |
5x Buffer (HotStarTaq DNA Polymerase) | 10 | 1x |
5x Q-Solution | 10 | 1x |
dNTP Mix (10 mM each) | 2 | 400 μM of each dNTP |
Enzym-Mix (HotStarTaq DNA Polymerase) | 2 | |
Primer Env-F (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
Primer Env-R (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
4. Amplification of the V3 region: nested PCR
volume/reaction (μl) | final concentration | |
H2O | 61.9 | |
10x PCR Buffer | 10 | 1x |
5x Q-Solution | 20 | 1x |
dNTP Mix (10 mM each) | 2 | 200 μM of each dNTP |
Primer Env-2F (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
Primer Env-2R (100 μM) | 0.3 | 0.6 μM |
HotStarTaq DNA Polymerase | 0.5 | 2,5 units/reaction |
93°C, 15min |
1 x |
95°C, 30 sec 50°C, 30 sec 72°C, 90 sec |
1 x |
95°C, 30 sec 56°C, 30 sec 72°C, 90 sec |
43 x |
72°C, 10 min 4°C ∞ |
580 μl H2O |
66 μl fast AP |
13.4 μl Exo I |
5. Sequence reaction of the V3 amplicon
4 μl sequence mix (HIV-Genotyping Kit) |
4 μl H2O |
1 μl Primer (100 pmol/μl) |
96°C, 10 sec | |
50°C, 10 sec | 36 x |
60°C, 45 sec | |
4°C ∞ |
6. Purification of the sequencing samples
Purify sequences using Sephadex G-50 superfine.
7. Sequencing the purified samples on the sequencer ABI Prism 3130 XL
8. Sequence editing
9. Sequencing data interpretation and tropism prediction
10. Representative Results
The geno2pheno[coreceptor] output shows a graded interpretation of the tropism. Depending on the likelihood of the coreceptor usage, the interpretation text and background color varies from green (<20% FPR), suggesting a safe administration for MVC, to yellow, suggesting a possible, low risk and finally to red. Red is the color suggesting not to prescribe MVC. In addition, the server generates a pdf report that can be printed, filled in with patient’s and sample data, and sent to the physician. Examples of geno2pheno[coreceptor] output are depicted in Fig. 6.
Figure. 1. Schematic replication of HIV. The virion must bind to the cellular CD4 as receptor and to either the CCR5 or CXCR4 as coreceptor. The coreceptor CCR5 can be blocked with CCR5 antagonists like Maraviroc (MVC, Celsentri, Selzentry). After fusion of the viral and cellular membranes, the viral nucleocapsid is released in the cytoplasm. The nucleocapsid disassembles and the viral RNA complex is liberated into the cytoplasm. The viral reverse transcriptase (RT) transcribes the genomic RNA into proviral DNA, that is then transported to the nucleus and integrated into the host genome by the HIV integrase. Cellular RNA polymerases transcribe viral genomic and messenger RNAs from the proviral genome. The viral proteins are produced in the cytoplasm and transported to the cell surface. The virus particles bud as immature, non-infectious virions from the cells. The HIV protease cleaves the proteins producing to infectious particles. Inhibition of one of the steps leads to an interruption of the replication cycle.
The antiretroviral drugs and the replication step that they inhibit are marked in red.
The viral RNA and proviral DNA (material used for tropism or resistance analysis) are marked in green.
Figure 2. HIV proviral genome. The HIV particle is built with different structural proteins and houses various enzymes and proteins both from viral and cellular origin. The figure shows the location of the genes within the viral genome. The surface proteins gp120 and gp41 constitute spikes on the surface of the virion and contact the human cell to perform the membrane fusion. In the lower part of the figure, the PCR amplification products and the primers used in our protocol are shown.
Figure 3. Proportion of patients with low viral load (VL) measurements analyzed for drug-resistance or tropism determination at the Institute of Virology, University of Cologne (Germany).
Figure 4. Overall scheme of the experiment.. Please click here to see a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5. Sequence editing with Lasergene. The V3 amplicon is sequenced with at least one forward and one reverse primer. Lasergene alignes the “.abi” files obtained from the sequencer with the reference sequences “V3-Consensus B” and env. Lasergene creates a consensus sequence using all the row data available. The reference sequences can be marked (and are then displayed in grey) so that they do not contribute to the sample consensus sequence.
Figure 6. Tropism prediction reports generated by the geno2pheno[coreceptor] tool.The reports are generated as pdf files that can be saved and completed in the computer. Additional data such us patient’s name, date of blood extraction, etc., can be manually included using a pdf writer program. Specific comments can be also added. These data are exclusively on the user’s computer and not on the geno2pheno[coreceptor] server. Please click here to see a larger version of this figure.
The V3 sequence permits a reliable viral tropism prediction, as shown in clinical studies3-9. In fact, genotypic determination is contemplated in the current European and German-Austrian guidelines10.
Compared to phenotypic testing, not only is the turnover time shorter (equivalent to resistance testing), but also are the costs. In addition, a major advantage of genotypic testing is that the results are graded as FPR and therefore can be adapted to the patients’ needs. Trofile results, on the other hand, are simply R5 or X4 reports, and access to the raw data is not given.
Currently, The European guidelines suggest a FPR cut-off of 20%10, while the Austrian-German guidelines allow adapting the FPR cut-off specifically to each patient’s needs11. In this line, for patients with a broad range of antiretroviral drugs options, higher FPR cut-offs (> 20%) are recommended. Conversely, for heavily pre-treated patients with limited therapeutic options, lower FPR cut-offs (> 5%) may be used. This kind of therapy guidance is currently ongoing by the resistance testing to NRTIs, NNRTIs, PIs, and INIs, where partially-active drugs may be included in the treatment for patients with reduced therapeutic options. In addition, with growing numbers of genotypically-guided therapy changes, the clinically-relevant FPR cut-offs are constantly being adjusted by a panel of bioinformaticians, virologists and clinicians.
Another important advantage of the genotypic tropism testing is the possibility of analyzing clinical samples with very low or even undetectable viral load (VL). In this cases, when plasma RNA is not amplifiable, the proviral DNA can be sequenced and used for reliable predictions9,12. Of note, the number of patients with low or undetectable viral load has sharply increased in the latest years. To date, the Trofile assay only allows the analysis of samples from patients with VL<1000 copies/ml. However, preliminary studies have shown that proviral DNA may be also adecuate to be tested by Trofile13.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors are funded from the Corus, MedSys Cell Entry, CHAIN and Resina projects.
Name of the reagent | Company | Catalogue number | Comments |
MagNA Pure Compact Nucleic Acid Isolation Kit I | Roche Diagnostics | 04 802 993 001 | |
MagNA Pure Compact System | Roche Diagnostics | 03731146001 | |
T3000 Thermocycler | Biometra | 050-723 | |
One Step RT-PCR Kit | Qiagen | 210215 | |
HotStarTaq Master Mix Kit | Qiagen | 203445 | |
QIAquick PCR Purification Kit | Qiagen | 28106 | |
Exonuclease I (Exo I) | Fermentas | EN0582 | |
FastAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase | Fermentas | EF0651 | |
BigDye Terminator v3.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit | Applied Biosystems | 4337457 | |
Sephadex G-50 Superfine | GE Healthcare | 17-0041-01 | |
ABI Prism 3130 XL capillary sequencer | Applied Biosystems | 3130XL |