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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, November 2003, p. 979-981, Vol. 10, No. 6
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.6.979-981.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Multiple Effects of the M184V Resistance Mutation in the Reverse Transcriptase of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1
Dan Turner, Bluma Brenner, and Mark A. Wainberg*
McGill University AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

INTRODUCTION
The initial use of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
(NRTIs) in treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease,
followed by highly active antiretroviral therapy, has significantly
diminished HIV-related morbidity and mortality (
22). However,
antiretroviral therapy has also led to the emergence of drug
resistance, potentially leading to virological and clinical
failure. This problem is offset to some extent by the finding
that drug-resistant viruses may have a measurable replication
disadvantage in comparison to wild-type strains in the absence
of drug pressure (
26). This diminution in viral replication
capacity or fitness is the result of resistance-conferring mutations
in the reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease enzymes of HIV
that affect their function; these mutations are amplified and/or
selected by antiviral drug pressure.
Therapeutic regimens containing lamivudine (3TC) have been shown to be highly effective in the treatment of HIV-infected patients, despite the fact that a single mutation at position 184 involving a transition from methionine to valine (M184V) confers a loss of susceptibility to this drug of 100- to 1,000-fold (5). Moreover, 3TC selects for this mutation rapidly compared to the development of resistance to other drugs (16, 31, 35). The M184V mutation may also be selected on occasion by abacavir and didanosine (ddI), but it confers only low-level resistance to these compounds (11, 33), and in general, the presence of an M184V mutation alone, in the absence of other mutations, does not represent an obstacle to the use of either ddI or abacavir in antiviral chemotherapy. The M184V mutation is also associated with impaired viral fitness, increased RT fidelity, and hypersensitization to several other NRTIs (23). In this review, we discuss the various effects of the M184V mutation on viral fitness, delay of appearance of other mutations, and potential immunological consequences in HIV-infected individuals.

VIRAL FITNESS
Viral fitness is defined as the ability of a virus to adapt
to its environment in terms of replicative capacity. Viruses
with higher fitness can outcompete those of lower fitness as
measured by tissue culture assays, including viral growth kinetics,
single-cycle infection, and growth competition (
26). The diminished
fitness of viruses containing the M184V mutation has been shown
both in vitro (
3,
32) and in clinical studies (
7,
9,
17,
20).
The estimated fitness of a given virus varies depending on the laboratory methodology, the viral strain utilized, and the type of cells used for culture; e.g., primary cells such as peripheral blood mononuclear cells, which contain low levels of deoxynucleoside triphosphate pools, may restrict viral replication more than cell lines which have higher deoxynucleoside triphosphate pools (3). HIV-1 RT processivity (which is defined as the number of nucleotides incorporated before the enzyme dissociates from the template) may be a major determinant of viral replication capacity or fitness (3, 6, 20, 32). It has been shown that defects in processivity, as measured biochemically, are often correlated with reduced replication fitness.
Clinical studies include the NUCA3001 study, in which patients who had received less than 4 weeks of zidovudine (ZDV) treatment were randomized to receive either 3TC monotherapy, ZDV monotherapy, or combination therapy with 3TC and ZDV for up to 52 weeks (9, 10). The results showed that viremia in the 3TC monotherapy arm attained a nadir of 1.2 log10 units by week 4, prior to viral load rebound, concomitant with the appearance of the M184V mutation; however, viremia consistently remained below baseline in patients who received 3TC and, moreover, was below that in patients who received ZDV alone. The AVANTI 2 and AVANTI 3 studies compared the efficacy of ZDV-3TC combined with a protease inhibitor, i.e., either indinavir (IDV) or nelfinavir (9). The development of the M184V mutation in both of these studies was associated with a significantly lower plasma viral load, while in contrast, the occurrence of ZDV-associated mutations had a negative effect on viral load. Finally, the Trilege trial was an induction-maintenance study in which patients began therapy with ZDV-3TC and IDV for 12 weeks, followed by maintenance therapy with either ZDV-3TC or ZDV-IDV for a further 6-week period. Removal of 3TC from the triple-drug regimen was associated with higher viral load at rebound compared to maintenance on ZDV-3TC (7), and the majority of patients on ZDV-3TC who experienced rebound harbored M184V.

EFFECT ON IMMUNE RESPONSE
The M184V mutation may also be associated with the ability of
the immune system to suppress viral replication. Cytotoxic T
lymphocytes (CTL) specific for HIV are considered to be a hallmark
of efficient virus-specific immune responsiveness (
4,
15,
21).
The consequences of RT-associated mutations for recognition
by CTL and the ability of host immune responsiveness to help
control the growth of resistant variants has been evaluated
in a limited way. In one study, a prospective analysis of CTL
responses directed against RT mutations in patients treated
with NRTIs was performed by using polyclonal HIV-specific CTL
lines and evaluation of gamma interferon production (
29). The
M41L, L74V, and M184V mutations were all associated with greater
CTL recognition than was an absence of mutations. In contrast,
RT sequences in which the 215Y mutation was present were found
to be poorly immunogenic. Another study showed specific CTL
response to sequences that included the M184V mutation in only
one patient out of 28 who were studied (
30). It is possible
that enhanced CTL recognition of some mutations may contribute
to a lower replicative capacity of viruses that harbor these
mutations. In addition, humoral immunity may play a role, and
neutralization antibody titers from nine ZDV-treated subjects
were shown to decline seven times faster than those in nine
3TC-treated patients (
34). Another study showed a slower escape
from neutralizing antibodies in HIV type 1 (HIV-1) variants
containing M184V compared to wild-type virus, as a consequence
of more limited variability in the envelope gene (
12).

DELAYED APPEARANCE OF OTHER RESISTANCE-CONFERRING MUTATIONS
Resistance mutations for antiretroviral agents arise spontaneously
as a result of the error-prone replication of HIV-1 and, in
addition, are selected both in vitro and in vivo by pharmacological
pressure (
18,
25,
28). The high rate of spontaneous mutation
in HIV-1 has been attributed largely to the absence of a 3'

5'
exonuclease proofreading mechanism. Sequence analyses of HIV-1
DNA have detected several types of mutations, including base
substitutions, additions, and deletions (
28). The frequency
of spontaneous mutations for HIV-1 can vary considerably as
a result of differences among viral strains (
18). The overall
mutation rates for wild-type laboratory strains of HIV-1 have
been reported to range from 97
x 10
-4 to 200
x 10
-4 per nucleotide
for HXB2 to as high as 800
x 10
-4 per nucleotide for the HIV-1
NY5 strain (
27,
28). This is, in part, a result of low RT fidelity.
However, with a DNA template, M184V RT showed higher fidelity
than did the wild-type enzyme (
34); this may potentially affect
the development of resistance to other antiretroviral agents.
In the ALBI trial (
19), for example, the T215Y mutation developed
in a significantly higher proportion of patients who were randomized
to treatment with ddI-stavudine (ddI-d4T) (62%) than in those
who were treated with ZDV-3TC (10%) (
24). The Q151M multinucleoside
resistance mutation was also observed less frequently in patients
who had been treated with 3TC (
24). Similar results have also
been reported in a retrospective analysis of the effect of the
M184V substitution on the incidence of thymidine analogue-associated
mutations (TAMs) and fold differences in phenotypic resistance
to ZDV and d4T among isolates from treatment-experienced patients
enrolled in the CNAB 3002 study. The results showed that the
presence of M184V was associated with a significantly lower
incidence of TAMs, notably D67N, L210W, and T215Y/F; moreover,
this was independent of the plasma HIV-1 RNA level and duration
of prior treatment with antiretroviral agents. Levels of phenotypic
resistance to ZDV and d4T were also reduced in those patients
in whom M184V was selected as a result of previous exposure
to 3TC compared to patients in whom this mutation was not present
(
2).
The development of ZDV resistance was also evaluated in patients experiencing virological failure with 3TC-containing regimens in the AVANTI 2 and 3 clinical studies. In these trials, antiretroviral therapy-naive patients with HIV infection were randomly assigned to treatment with either 3TC-ZDV or 3TC-ZDV-IDV for 52 weeks in AVANTI 2 or with 3TC-ZDV-nelfinavir for 28 weeks in AVANTI 3 (17). Using combined data from both trials, genotypic analysis revealed ZDV resistance-conferring mutations in 27% of patients from the 3TC-ZDV arm of AVANTI 2, whereas these mutations were absent in patients from both arms of AVANTI 3 as well as in patients who received 3TC-ZDV-IDV in AVANTI 2. The M184V mutation, in these studies, was present in viral isolates from most patients who were treated with 3TC-ZDV. Overall, these results compare favorably to those from the CNA3003 study of abacavir intensification, in which selection rates for TAMs and Q151M were also reduced following the appearance of M184V (1). In regard to mutations associated with protease inhibitors and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, a cell culture phenotypic assay study has shown that selection of resistance to efavirenz and amprenavir was delayed when viruses harbored M184V compared to the case for wild-type virus (8). Other studies have demonstrated that the presence of M184V may not significantly restrict the extent of mutagenesis in the protease gene (13, 14).

CONCLUSION
3TC was one of the first drugs shown to be associated with diminished
HIV morbidity and mortality. Its benefit may be exerted even
after emergence of M184V, a mutation that confers a high level
of resistance to this drug. As briefly reviewed here, several
mechanisms may be invoked to explain the clinical benefits associated
with emergence of the M184V substitution in RT; these include
decreased RT processivity, the possibility of enhanced immune
responsiveness, increased RT fidelity, and diminished replicative
fitness.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Dan Turner has received fellowship support from the Canadian
HIV Trials Network. Research in our laboratories is supported
by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research and by a generous
donation from Aldo and Diane Bensadoun.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: McGill AIDS Centre, Jewish General Hospital, 3755 Cote Ste Catherine Rd., Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1E2. Phone: (514) 340-8260. Fax: (514) 340-7537. E-mail:
mark.wainberg{at}mcgill.ca.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, November 2003, p. 979-981, Vol. 10, No. 6
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.6.979-981.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.