Distinct HIV-1 long terminal repeat quasispecies present in nervous tissues compared to that in lung, blood and lymphoid tissues of an AIDS patient

Abstract
To investigate the phylogenetic relationship of HIV-1 proviral long terminal repeat (LTR) variants present in postmortem samples of lymph node, spleen, lung, dorsal root ganglion and spinal cord as well as in the peripheral blood of an HIV-1-infected patient dying with AIDS. Postmortem tissues were studied by a combination of histology, cell culture and molecular analyses. The patient had a stable CD4 count of 10 x 10(6)/I during the 12 months preceding death. A 540 base-pair fragment of the LTR including U3/R/U5 was amplified using polymerase chain reaction on proviral DNA from the five postmortem tissues and peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained 2 months prior to death. The population of viral variants was determined by sequencing at least five plasmid clones of the amplicons. The relationship between the variants present in different body sites was investigated using molecular phylogeny methods. HIV-1 was present in all organs analysed and correlated with the presence of abnormal histology. Genetic variation leading to divergence from the consensus sequence was more frequently present in characterized transcription factor binding sites within the LTR (P < 0.0001) although the HIV-1 LTR quasispecies in the different body sites showed similar, relatively low levels of divergence (intra-organ median heterogeneity ranging from 0.0094 to 0.017). Phylogenetic analysis showed that the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion harboured an LTR population genetically distinct from that present in other organs and more closely related to a previously characterized neurotropic strain of HIV (strain JRcsf). The independent clustering of HIV-1 LTR variants present in spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion shows that HIV-1 LTR evolution can occur in a compartmentalized fashion. The data show that the LTR is an important region to analyse in sequence variation studies of HIV since it may play a role in nervous tissue adaptation of HIV-1 and neuropathogenicity. Outgrowth of HIV-1 LTR variants that are most fit for the utilization of tissue-specific transcription factors can occur in the nervous tissue.