PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

HIV-2 integrase polymorphisms and longitudinal genotypic analysis of HIV-2 infected patients failing a raltegravir-containing regimen.

  • Joana Cavaco-Silva,
  • Ana Abecasis,
  • Ana Cláudia Miranda,
  • José Poças,
  • Jorge Narciso,
  • Maria João Águas,
  • Fernando Maltez,
  • Isabel Almeida,
  • Isabel Germano,
  • António Diniz,
  • Maria de Fátima Gonçalves,
  • Perpétua Gomes,
  • Celso Cunha,
  • Ricardo Jorge Camacho,
  • Portuguese HIV-2 Resistance Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0092747
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e92747

Abstract

Read online

To characterize the HIV-2 integrase gene polymorphisms and the pathways to resistance of HIV-2 patients failing a raltegravir-containing regimen, we studied 63 integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTI)-naïve patients, and 10 heavily pretreated patients exhibiting virological failure while receiving a salvage raltegravir-containing regimen. All patients were infected by HIV-2 group A. 61.4% of the integrase residues were conserved, including the catalytic motif residues. No INSTI-major resistance mutations were detected in the virus population from naïve patients, but two amino acids that are secondary resistance mutations to INSTIs in HIV-1 were observed. The 10 raltegravir-experienced patients exhibited resistance mutations via three main genetic pathways: N155H, Q148R, and eventually E92Q - T97A. The 155 pathway was preferentially used (7/10 patients). Other mutations associated to raltegravir resistance in HIV-1 were also observed in our HIV-2 population (V151I and D232N), along with several novel mutations previously unreported. Data retrieved from this study should help build a more robust HIV-2-specific algorithm for the genotypic interpretation of raltegravir resistance, and contribute to improve the clinical monitoring of HIV-2-infected patients.