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Do HIV+ Rapid Progressors Show More Divergence than Non-Progressors?
Karen Klyczek, Alix Darden, Susan Godfrey, Karl Beres, and Mark Bergland
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Hypothesis Rapidly progressing HIV+ subjects will show more divergence in their HIV sequences between their first and last visits, compared to non-progressors.
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Methods Study population: a cohort of IV drug users in Baltimore
-six rapid progressors - < 200 CD4 T cells/microliter (subjects 1, 3, 4, 10, 11, 15) -three non-progressors - > 650 CD4 T cells/microliter (subjects 2, 12, 13) Generation of phylogenetic trees: 285 bp regions of the HIV-1 env gene was amplified for all subjects. Data from Markam et al. (1998) analyzed using ClustalW (Biology Workbench)
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Table 1. Subject parameters for HIV study.
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Progressors
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Progressors Subject 3
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Progressors Subject #4 Visit #1
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Progressors Subject 10
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Progressors Subject 11
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Progressors
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Nonprogressors Subject 2
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Nonprogressors
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Nonprogressors Subject 13
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Conclusions and Discussion
Overall, rapid progressors exhibited more divergence in their HIV sequences than non-progressors. In rapid progressors, sequences from clones isolated on their first visit tended to cluster separately from clones isolated on their last visit. In two of three non-progressors, there was less separation between sequences obtained from the first and last visits. More data from non-progressors are needed to confirm these differences. Reference: Markham, R.B. et al. (1998) P.N.A.S. USA 95:12568.
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