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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2004, p. 2847-2849, Vol. 42, No. 6
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.6.2847-2849.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Mutant That Escapes Detection in a Fourth-Generation Immunoassay for HIV Infection
Catherine Gaudy,1 Alain Moreau,1 Sylvie Brunet,1 Jean-Michel Descamps,2 Pascale Deleplanque,2 Denys Brand,1 and Francis Barin1*
Laboratoire de Virologie, Equipe Associée 3250, Centre National de Référence du VIH, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Bretonneau, Tours 37044,1
Centre Hospitalier, Niort, France2
Received 12 November 2003/
Accepted 21 February 2004

ABSTRACT
We report a case of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type
1 infection not detected by a highly sensitive combined antigen-antibody
assay. The virus was a subtype B strain harboring a unique sequence
within the immunodominant epitope of the transmembrane glycoprotein.
Immunochemical analysis indicated that this sequence was probably
responsible for the failure to detect HIV antibodies.

CASE REPORT
A 31-year-old man (patient LA) consulted for febrile pharyngitis
at the beginning of July 2002. He had had unprotected homosexual
relationships during the preceding months. The routine test
for the detection of anti-human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV)
antibodies, the Axsym HIV1/2 gO test (Abbott Laboratories, North
Chicago, Ill.), gave a positive result, whereas the Vidas Duo
test (BioMérieux, Marcy l'Étoile, France) was
negative (Fig.
1A). p24 antigen (Vidas HIV p24 II; BioMérieux)
was detected (16 pg/ml), but the Western blot (new LAV blot;
Bio-Rad, Marnes-la-Coquette, France) was negative. This serological
profile, together with clinical and epidemiological data, unambiguously
suggested primary HIV infection. The patient was referred to
J.-M. Descamps 3 weeks later. At that time, the Vidas Duo test
still gave negative results, whereas another combined assay
(HIV Ag/Ab; Murex, Dartford, United Kingdom) and a third-generation
assay for HIV antibody (HIV1/2 Ab; Ortho Diagnostics, Inc.,
Raritan, N.J.) both gave strong positive results (Fig.
1A).
The viral load was 64,000 copies/ml (Roche Monitor, Branchburg,
N.J.). Western blot analysis (Genelabs, Singapore, Singapore)
revealed the presence of antibodies against gp160, gp120, and
p24. Changes in the serological profile for subsequent blood
samples clearly confirmed that primary HIV infection had occurred
a few weeks previously (Fig.
1A and B). The Vidas Duo test began
to give positive results at the lower limit of the cutoff value
(0.33 for a cutoff value equal to 0.35) a few days later, more
than a month after the initial detection. Results with this
test were clearly positive 2 months later, even though the signal
was not strong (Fig.
1A), which is surprising given the recognized
high performance of this reagent (
4,
6).
As all immunoassays designed to detect anti-HIV antibodies contain
at least the immunodominant epitope of the transmembrane glycoprotein
(gp41) in its native form or a recombinant form or as a synthetic
peptide (as in the Vidas Duo test) on the solid phase, we investigated
the amino acid sequence of this major antigenic region in the
strain carried by this patient. We amplified the gp41 region
of the
env gene of the LA strain by a nested PCR protocol designed
to detect phylogenetically diverse HIV variants (
8). The amplified
segment was sequenced (469 nucleotides), and the subtype of
the strain was determined by the neighbor-joining method. The
sequence was compared with 50 reference sequences corresponding
to the nine subtypes and major circulating recombinant forms
(CRF01-AE and CRF02-AG) of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) groups M and O,
available from the HIV sequence database (
http://hiv-web.lanl.gov).
Distances were calculated with the Kimura two-parameter method,
as implemented in the MEGA program. Bootstrap analysis with
100 simulations was used to test the reliability of branching.
The LA strain clearly belonged to subtype B (Fig.
1C). Additional
phylogenetic analysis of the
pol gene (1,269 nucleotides encompassing
the protease plus reverse transcriptase regions) confirmed that
this strain belonged to subtype B (data not shown). However,
although the LA strain was clearly a subtype B variant, it possessed
a unique sequence within the immunodominant region, which differed
from the group M consensus sequence by seven amino acid substitutions
(Fig.
1D). Two of these substitutions, located in the cysteine
loop (K601R and L602H), are rare in subtype B but are frequently
found in subtype D. Another two of these substitutions, located
upstream, were very rare (L592F) or unique (G594A). The G594A
mutation has never before been reported in the National Center
for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Protein Database. The other
three mutations are frequently encountered (
3).
We investigated whether this unique, highly divergent sequence was responsible for the delayed detection of HIV antibodies by the Vidas Duo test by preparing three synthetic peptides overlapping the immunodominant epitope: one corresponded to the group M consensus sequence, one corresponded to the subtype D consensus sequence (containing the K601R and L602H mutations), and one corresponded to the LA strain sequence. Sequential serum samples from patient LA were tested in parallel for these three peptides (1 µg/ml) by an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay based on a procedure described previously (2). The patient's serum samples reacted strongly with the peptide from the strain with which the patient was infected, right from the first available sample, whereas they did not react with the group M consensus peptide until at least 2 months later and never reached the same intensity of reaction, even several months later (Fig. 1E). Intermediate binding results were obtained with the subtype D peptide that had two important substitutions within the cysteine loop in common with the LA strain.
Combined antigen-antibody assays that simultaneously detect the p24 antigen and HIV-specific antibodies were recently developed as a means of shortening the delay between infection with HIV and laboratory diagnosis. These assays, often referred to as fourth-generation assays, are now widely used to screen for HIV infection because they are clearly the most sensitive assays for the detection of HIV-1 infection (4, 5, 6, 7). It is clear that although considerable progress has been made in the serological detection of HIV infection over the past 18 years, the continuous and rapid genetic evolution of HIV will provide a permanent, ongoing challenge to the efficacy of tools developed by the highly creative researchers working in diagnostics. Previous reports have shown that infections with divergent non-subtype B variants might delay antibody detection (1). This report shows that even HIV infections due to subtype B variants may be detected with some delay, even with the most sensitive combined assays, if genetic drift involves the highly conserved immunodominant region of gp41. Our findings indicate the following. (i) Physicians and clinical biologists must interpret the results of HIV screening assays critically, always taking into account the clinical and epidemiological background for each individual case. (ii) National and international agencies should promote the continuous evaluation and reevaluation of screening assays for HIV infection and monitoring of the genetic evolution of the virus. (iii) Manufacturers of diagnostic tools might be able to improve their assays by including additional consensus sequences representing divergent HIV-1 group M variants. The last point is illustrated here by the ability of the antibody present in early serum samples from our patient to bind the divergent serotype D consensus peptide.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by funds from the French Ministry of
Health and the Agence Nationale de Recherche sur le Sida (ANRS,
France).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire de Virologie, CHU Bretonneau, 37044 Tours Cedex, France. Phone: (33) 2 47 47 80 58. Fax: (33) 2 47 47 36 10. E-mail:
fbarin{at}med.univ-tours.fr.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2004, p. 2847-2849, Vol. 42, No. 6
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.6.2847-2849.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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