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The role of viral fitness in HIV pathogenesis

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Abstract

The development of clinical symptoms, and clinical progression among persons infected with HIV-1 is the manifestation of the effects of the pathogenic viral life cycle of HIV-1. Individual variants of HIV-1 vary widely in features that determine viral fitness and virulence. HIV-1 exploits host antiviral responses, the APOBEC3G cytidine deaminase, and the low-fidelity HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, to ensure new variants with novel phenotypic features are continually present for expansion in response to changing conditions in the host, such as immune responses, or antiretroviral therapy. This highlevel variance has led to a wide range in observed fitness and virulence, across strains of HIV-1. The HIV-1 pol replication capacity assay (pol RC) measures features of viral fitness, associates with elevated CD4+ T-cell counts, yet is not strongly associated with HIV-1 RNA levels. The biological basis for elevated CD4+ T-cell counts among those carrying a virus of low pol RC may be because of lowered virus infectivity, or restricted tissue replication.

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Barbour, J.D., Grant, R.M. The role of viral fitness in HIV pathogenesis. Curr HIV/AIDS Rep 2, 29–34 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11904-996-0006-1

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