Natasha Wood
University of Cape Town
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Publication
Featured researches published by Natasha Wood.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Brandon F. Keele; Elena E. Giorgi; Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez; Julie M. Decker; Kimmy T. Pham; Maria G. Salazar; Chuanxi Sun; Truman Grayson; Shuyi Wang; Hui Li; Xiping Wei; Chunlai Jiang; Jennifer L. Kirchherr; Feng Gao; Jeffery A. Anderson; Li Hua Ping; Ronald Swanstrom; Georgia D. Tomaras; William A. Blattner; Paul A. Goepfert; J. Michael Kilby; Michael S. Saag; Eric Delwart; Michael P. Busch; Myron S. Cohen; David C. Montefiori; Barton F. Haynes; Brian Gaschen; Gayathri Athreya; Ha Y. Lee
The precise identification of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (Env) responsible for productive clinical infection could be instrumental in elucidating the molecular basis of HIV-1 transmission and in designing effective vaccines. Here, we developed a mathematical model of random viral evolution and, together with phylogenetic tree construction, used it to analyze 3,449 complete env sequences derived by single genome amplification from 102 subjects with acute HIV-1 (clade B) infection. Viral env genes evolving from individual transmitted or founder viruses generally exhibited a Poisson distribution of mutations and star-like phylogeny, which coalesced to an inferred consensus sequence at or near the estimated time of virus transmission. Overall, 78 of 102 subjects had evidence of productive clinical infection by a single virus, and 24 others had evidence of productive clinical infection by a minimum of two to five viruses. Phenotypic analysis of transmitted or early founder Envs revealed a consistent pattern of CCR5 dependence, masking of coreceptor binding regions, and equivalent or modestly enhanced resistance to the fusion inhibitor T1249 and broadly neutralizing antibodies compared with Envs from chronically infected subjects. Low multiplicity infection and limited viral evolution preceding peak viremia suggest a finite window of potential vulnerability of HIV-1 to vaccine-elicited immune responses, although phenotypic properties of transmitted Envs pose a formidable defense.
Journal of Virology | 2009
Melissa-Rose Abrahams; Jeffrey A. Anderson; Elena E. Giorgi; Cathal Seoighe; Koleka Mlisana; Li-Hua Ping; Gayathri Athreya; Florette K. Treurnicht; Brandon F. Keele; Natasha Wood; Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; Haitao Chu; Irving Hoffman; Shannon Galvin; Clement Mapanje; Peter N. Kazembe; R. Thebus; Susan A. Fiscus; Winston Hide; Myron S. Cohen; S. S. Abdool Karim; Barton F. Haynes; George M. Shaw; Beatrice H. Hahn; Bette T. Korber; R. Swanstrom; Carolyn Williamson
ABSTRACT Identifying the specific genetic characteristics of successfully transmitted variants may prove central to the development of effective vaccine and microbicide interventions. Although human immunodeficiency virus transmission is associated with a population bottleneck, the extent to which different factors influence the diversity of transmitted viruses is unclear. We estimate here the number of transmitted variants in 69 heterosexual men and women with primary subtype C infections. From 1,505 env sequences obtained using a single genome amplification approach we show that 78% of infections involved single variant transmission and 22% involved multiple variant transmissions (median of 3). We found evidence for mutations selected for cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte or antibody escape and a high prevalence of recombination in individuals infected with multiple variants representing another potential escape pathway in these individuals. In a combined analysis of 171 subtype B and C transmission events, we found that infection with more than one variant does not follow a Poisson distribution, indicating that transmission of individual virions cannot be seen as independent events, each occurring with low probability. While most transmissions resulted from a single infectious unit, multiple variant transmissions represent a significant fraction of transmission events, suggesting that there may be important mechanistic differences between these groups that are not yet understood.
PLOS Pathogens | 2009
Natasha Wood; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; Brandon F. Keele; Elena E. Giorgi; Michael Liu; Brian Gaschen; Marcus Daniels; Guido Ferrari; Barton F. Haynes; Andrew J. McMichael; George M. Shaw; Beatrice H. Hahn; Bette T. Korber; Cathal Seoighe
The pattern of viral diversification in newly infected individuals provides information about the host environment and immune responses typically experienced by the newly transmitted virus. For example, sites that tend to evolve rapidly across multiple early-infection patients could be involved in enabling escape from common early immune responses, could represent adaptation for rapid growth in a newly infected host, or could represent reversion from less fit forms of the virus that were selected for immune escape in previous hosts. Here we investigated the diversification of HIV-1 env coding sequences in 81 very early B subtype infections previously shown to have resulted from transmission or expansion of single viruses (n = 78) or two closely related viruses (n = 3). In these cases, the sequence of the infecting virus can be estimated accurately, enabling inference of both the direction of substitutions as well as distinction between insertion and deletion events. By integrating information across multiple acutely infected hosts, we find evidence of adaptive evolution of HIV-1 env and identify a subset of codon sites that diversified more rapidly than can be explained by a model of neutral evolution. Of 24 such rapidly diversifying sites, 14 were either i) clustered and embedded in CTL epitopes that were verified experimentally or predicted based on the individuals HLA or ii) in a nucleotide context indicative of APOBEC-mediated G-to-A substitutions, despite having excluded heavily hypermutated sequences prior to the analysis. In several cases, a rapidly evolving site was embedded both in an APOBEC motif and in a CTL epitope, suggesting that APOBEC may facilitate early immune escape. Ten rapidly diversifying sites could not be explained by CTL escape or APOBEC hypermutation, including the most frequently mutated site, in the fusion peptide of gp41. We also examined the distribution, extent, and sequence context of insertions and deletions, and we provide evidence that the length variation seen in hypervariable loop regions of the envelope glycoprotein is a consequence of selection and not of mutational hotspots. Our results provide a detailed view of the process of diversification of HIV-1 following transmission, highlighting the role of CTL escape and hypermutation in shaping viral evolution during the establishment of new infections.
Virology | 2011
Andile Nofemela; Gama Bandawe; R. Thebus; Jinny C. Marais; Natasha Wood; Oliver Hoffmann; Leonard Maboko; Michael Hoelscher; Zenda L. Woodman; Carolyn Williamson
The Mbeya region of Tanzania has a genetically complex HIV epidemic with multiple subtypes and recombinant forms circulating, together with a high frequency of dual infections with more than one subtype. This study aimed to determine whether this impacted the HIV-1 transmission bottleneck. A total of 210 env sequences from 22 participants were generated from recently infected women from Mbeya using the single genome amplification approach. Participants were infected with subtypes C (n=9), A (n=4), or D (n=1), and recombinants AC (n=4), CD (n=2), AD (n=1), or ACD (n=1). Sixteen participants (73%) were infected with a single variant; five (23%) with multiple variants; and one (4%) was dually infected. Thus the frequency of single variant infections was similar to cohorts located in genetically restricted subtype B or C epidemics, suggesting that multiple circulating subtypes and unique recombinant forms do not have a significant impact on the transmission bottleneck.
Journal of Virology | 2017
Colin S. Anthony; Talita. York; Valerie Bekker; David. Matten; Philippe. Selhorst; Roux-Cil. Ferreria; Nigel Garrett; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Lynn Morris; Natasha Wood; Penny L. Moore; Carolyn Williamson
ABSTRACT V3-glycan-targeting broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) are a focus of HIV-1 vaccine development. Understanding the viral dynamics that stimulate the development of these antibodies can provide insights for immunogen design. We used a deep-sequencing approach, together with neutralization phenotyping, to investigate the rate and complexity of escape from V3-glycan-directed bNAbs compared to overlapping early strain-specific neutralizing antibody (ssNAb) responses to the V3/C3 region in donor CAP177. Escape from the ssNAb response occurred rapidly via an N334-to-N332 glycan switch, which took just 7.5 weeks to reach >50% frequency. In contrast, escape from the bNAbs was mediated via multiple pathways and took longer, with escape first occurring through an increase in V1 loop length, which took 46 weeks to reach 50% frequency, followed by an N332-to-N334 reversion, which took 66 weeks. Importantly, bNAb escape was incomplete, with contemporaneous neutralization observed up to 3 years postinfection. Both the ssNAb response and the bNAb response were modulated by the presence/absence of the N332 glycan, indicating an overlap between the two epitopes. Thus, selective pressure by ssNAbs to maintain the N332 glycan may have constrained the bNAb escape pathway. This slower and incomplete viral escape resulted in prolonged exposure of the bNAb epitope, which may in turn have aided the maturation of the bNAb lineage. IMPORTANCE The development of an HIV-1 vaccine is of paramount importance, and broadly neutralizing antibodies are likely to be a key component of a protective vaccine. The V3-glycan-targeting bNAb responses are among the most promising vaccine targets, as they are commonly elicited during infection. Understanding the interplay between viral evolution and the development of these antibodies provides insights that may guide immunogen design. Our work contrasted the dynamics of the early strain-specific antibodies and the later broadly neutralizing responses to a common Env target (V3C3), showing slower and more complex escape from bNAbs. Constrained bNAb escape, together with evidence of contemporaneous autologous virus neutralization, supports the proposal that prolonged exposure of the bNAb epitope enabled the maturation of the bNAb lineage.
Virology | 2017
Thandeka Moyo; Roux-cil Ferreira; Reyaaz Davids; Zarinah Sonday; Penny L. Moore; Simon A. A. Travers; Natasha Wood; Jeffrey R. Dorfman
Glycans on HIV-1 Envelope serve multiple functions including blocking epitopes from antibodies. We show that removal of glycan 301, a major target of anti-V3/glycan antibodies, has substantially different effects in two viruses. While glycan 301 on Du156.12 blocks epitopes commonly recognized by sera from chronically HIV-1-infected individuals, it does not do so on CAP45.G3, suggesting that removing the 301 glycan has a smaller effect on the integrity of the glycan shield in CAP45.G3. Changes in sensitivity to broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies suggest that the interaction between glycan 301 and the CD4 binding site differ substantially between these 2 viruses. Molecular modeling suggests that removal of glycan 301 likely exposes a greater surface area of the V3 and C4 regions in Du156.12. Our data indicate that the contribution of the 301 glycan to resistance to common neutralizing antibodies varies between viruses, allowing for easier selection for its loss in some viruses.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Roux-cil Ferreira; Oliver C. Grant; Thandeka Moyo; Jeffrey R. Dorfman; Robert J. Woods; Simon A. A. Travers; Natasha Wood
The HIV-1 envelope (Env) glycoprotein is the primary target of the humoral immune response and a critical vaccine candidate. However, Env is densely glycosylated and thereby substantially protected from neutralisation. Importantly, glycan N301 shields V3 loop and CD4 binding site epitopes from neutralising antibodies. Here, we use molecular dynamics techniques to evaluate the structural rearrangements that maintain the protective qualities of the glycan shield after the loss of glycan N301. We examined a naturally occurring subtype C isolate and its N301A mutant; the mutant not only remained protected against neutralising antibodies targeting underlying epitopes, but also exhibited an increased resistance to the VRC01 class of broadly neutralising antibodies. Analysis of this mutant revealed several glycans that were responsible, independently or through synergy, for the neutralisation resistance of the mutant. These data provide detailed insight into the glycan shield’s ability to compensate for the loss of a glycan, as well as the cascade of glycan movements on a protomer, starting at the point mutation, that affects the integrity of an antibody epitope located at the edge of the diminishing effect. These results present key, previously overlooked, considerations for HIV-1 Env glycan research and related vaccine studies.
Virology Journal | 2009
Gordon William Harkins; Wayne Delport; Siobain Duffy; Natasha Wood; Adérito L. Monjane; Betty E. Owor; Lara Donaldson; Salem Saumtally; Guy Triton; Rob W. Briddon; Dionne N. Shepherd; Edward P. Rybicki; Darren P. Martin; Arvind Varsani
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2007
Cathal Seoighe; Farahnaz Ketwaroo; Visva Pillay; Konrad Scheffler; Natasha Wood; Rodger Duffet; Marketa Zvelebil; Neil Martinson; James McIntyre; Lynn Morris; Winston Hide
Virology | 2010
Florette K. Treurnicht; Cathal Seoighe; D. P. Martin; Natasha Wood; Melissa-Rose Abrahams; D. de Assis Rosa; Helba Bredell; Zenda L. Woodman; Winston Hide; Koleka Mlisana; S. S. Abdool Karim; C.M. Gray; Carolyn Williamson