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1.
Br Med Bull ; 58: 19-42, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11714622

ABSTRACT

Evolutionary modelling studies indicate less than a century has passed since the most recent common ancestor of the HIV-1 pandemic strains and, in that time frame, an extraordinarily diverse viral population has developed. HIV-1 employs a multitude of schemes to generate variants: accumulation of base substitutions, insertions and deletions, addition and loss of glycosylation sites in the envelope protein, and recombination. A comparison between HIV and influenza virus illustrates the extraordinary scale of HIV variation, and underscores the importance of exploring innovative HIV vaccine strategies. Deeper understanding of the implications of variation for both antibody and T-cell responses may help in the effort to rationally design vaccines that stimulate broad cross-reactivity. The impact of HIV-1 variation on host immune response is reviewed in this context.


Subject(s)
Antigenic Variation/genetics , Genetic Variation/genetics , HIV-1/genetics , AIDS Vaccines/immunology , Animals , Cross Reactions/immunology , Drug Design , Epitope Mapping/methods , Epitopes/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Variation/immunology , Global Health , HIV-1/immunology , HIV-1/pathogenicity , Haemophilus Vaccines/pharmacology , Humans , Influenza A virus/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Phylogeny , T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic/drug effects
2.
Bioinformatics ; 17(5): 415-8, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11331235

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: The amount of HIV-1 sequence data generated (presently around 42000 sequences, of which more than 22000 are from the V3 region of the viral envelope) presents a challenge for anyone working on the analysis of these data. A major problem is obtaining the region of interest from the stored sequences, which often contain but are not limited to that region. In addition, multiple alignment programs generally cannot deal with the large numbers of sequences that are available for many HIV-1 regions. We set out to provide our users with a tool that will retrieve and create an initial alignment of the HIV sequences that are available for a given genomic region. RESULTS: The MPAlign (Multiple Pairwise Alignment) web interface is a collection of Perl scripts that retrieves sequences from the Los Alamos HIV sequence database based on a number of search parameters. All sequences were pairwise-aligned to a model sequence using the Hidden Markov Model-based program HMMER. The HMMER model is general enough to accommodate virtually all HIV-1 sequences stored in the database. To create a multiple sequence alignment, gaps were inserted into the sequences during retrieval, so that they are aligned to one another. Retrieving and aligning the almost 560 gp120 sequences (approximately>1500 nt) stored in the database is at least 1500 times faster than a similar Clustal alignment.


Subject(s)
Databases, Factual , HIV-1/genetics , Sequence Alignment/statistics & numerical data , Algorithms , Computational Biology , Humans , Markov Chains , Software , User-Computer Interface
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