Sarah Walker
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sarah Walker.
Retrovirology | 2011
Jean L Mbisa; Ravi K Gupta; Desire Kabamba; Veronica Mulenga; Moxmalama Kalumbi; Chifumbe Chintu; Chris M. Parry; Diana M. Gibb; Sarah Walker; Patricia A. Cane; Deenan Pillay
BackgroundThe Q151M multi-drug resistance (MDR) pathway in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) confers reduced susceptibility to all nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) excluding tenofovir (TDF). This pathway emerges after long term failure of therapy, and is increasingly observed in the resource poor world, where antiretroviral therapy is rarely accompanied by intensive virological monitoring. In this study we examined the genotypic, phenotypic and fitness correlates associated with the development of Q151M MDR in the absence of viral load monitoring.ResultsSingle-genome sequencing (SGS) of full-length RT was carried out on sequential samples from an HIV-infected individual enrolled in ART rollout. The emergence of Q151M MDR occurred in the order A62V, V75I, and finally Q151M on the same genome at 4, 17 and 37 months after initiation of therapy, respectively. This was accompanied by a parallel cumulative acquisition of mutations at 20 other codon positions; seven of which were located in the connection subdomain. We established that fourteen of these mutations are also observed in Q151M-containing sequences submitted to the Stanford University HIV database. Phenotypic drug susceptibility testing demonstrated that the Q151M-containing RT had reduced susceptibility to all NRTIs except for TDF. RT domain-swapping of patient and wild-type RTs showed that patient-derived connection subdomains were not associated with reduced NRTI susceptibility. However, the virus expressing patient-derived Q151M RT at 37 months demonstrated ~44% replicative capacity of that at 4 months. This was further reduced to ~22% when the Q151M-containing DNA pol domain was expressed with wild-type C-terminal domain, but was then fully compensated by coexpression of the coevolved connection subdomain.ConclusionsWe demonstrate a complex interplay between drug susceptibility and replicative fitness in the acquisition Q151M MDR with serious implications for second-line regimen options. The acquisition of the Q151M pathway occurred sequentially over a long period of failing NRTI therapy, and was associated with mutations in multiple RT domains.
The Journal of Pediatrics | 1998
Hui-Chuan Lai; Michael R. Kosorok; Sherie Sondel; Shu-Tien Chen; Stacey C. FitzSimmons; Christopher G. Green; Guanghong Shen; Sarah Walker; Philip M. Farrell
Land Use Policy | 2014
Catalina Munteanu; Tobias Kuemmerle; Martin Boltiziar; Van Butsic; Urs Gimmi; Lubos Halada; Dominik Kaim; Géza Király; Éva Konkoly-Gyuró; Jacek Kozak; Juraj Lieskovský; Matej Mojses; Daniel Müller; Krzystof Ostafin; Katarzyna Ostapowicz; Oleksandra Shandra; Přemysl Štych; Sarah Walker; Volker C. Radeloff
Journal of Development Economics | 2013
Jennifer Meredith; Jonathan Robinson; Sarah Walker; Bruce Wydick
Biological Conservation | 2015
Van Butsic; Matthias Baumann; Anja Shortland; Sarah Walker; Tobias Kuemmerle
The Journal of Pediatrics | 2004
David M. Burger; Alina S. Bergshoeff; Ronald de Groot; Diana M. Gibb; Sarah Walker; Jean-Marc Tréluyer; Richard M. W. Hoetelmans
Journal of Development Economics | 2018
Jennifer Alix-Garcia; Sarah Walker; Anne Bartlett; Harun Onder; Apurva Sanghi
The Journal of Economic History | 2018
Jennifer Alix-Garcia; Sarah Walker; Volker C. Radeloff; Jacek Kozak
Journal of Comparative Economics | 2018
Sarah Walker
Archive | 2017
James Hakim; Victor Musiime; Alex Szubert; Jane Mallewa; Abraham Siika; Clara Agutu; Simon Walker; Sarah Pett; Mutsa Bwakura-Dangarembizi; Abbas Lugemwa; Symon Kaunda; Mercy Karoney; Godfrey Musoro; Sheila Kabahenda; Kusum Nathoo; Kathryn Maitland; Anna Griffiths; Margaret J. Thomason; Cissy Kityo; Peter Mugyenyi; Andrew J. Prendergast; Sarah Walker; Diana M. Gibb