Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wenjie Deng is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wenjie Deng.


Nature | 2012

Increased HIV-1 vaccine efficacy against viruses with genetic signatures in Env V2

Morgane Rolland; Paul T. Edlefsen; Brendan B. Larsen; Sodsai Tovanabutra; Eric Sanders-Buell; Tomer Hertz; Allan C. deCamp; Chris Carrico; Sergey Menis; Craig A. Magaret; Hasan Ahmed; Michal Juraska; Lennie Chen; Philip Konopa; Snehal Nariya; Julia N. Stoddard; Kim Wong; Haishuang Zhao; Wenjie Deng; Brandon Maust; Meera Bose; Shana Howell; A Bates; Michelle Lazzaro; Annemarie O'Sullivan; Esther Lei; Andrea Bradfield; Grace Ibitamuno; Vatcharain Assawadarachai; Robert J. O'Connell

The RV144 trial demonstrated 31% vaccine efficacy at preventing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 infection. Antibodies against the HIV-1 envelope variable loops 1 and 2 (Env V1 and V2) correlated inversely with infection risk. We proposed that vaccine-induced immune responses against V1/V2 would have a selective effect against, or sieve, HIV-1 breakthrough viruses. A total of 936 HIV-1 genome sequences from 44 vaccine and 66 placebo recipients were examined. We show that vaccine-induced immune responses were associated with two signatures in V2 at amino acid positions 169 and 181. Vaccine efficacy against viruses matching the vaccine at position 169 was 48% (confidence interval 18% to 66%; P = 0.0036), whereas vaccine efficacy against viruses mismatching the vaccine at position 181 was 78% (confidence interval 35% to 93%; P = 0.0028). Residue 169 is in a cationic glycosylated region recognized by broadly neutralizing and RV144-derived antibodies. The predicted distance between the two signature sites (21 ± 7 Å) and their match/mismatch dichotomy indicate that multiple factors may be involved in the protection observed in RV144. Genetic signatures of RV144 vaccination in V2 complement the finding of an association between high V1/V2-binding antibodies and reduced risk of HIV-1 acquisition, and provide evidence that vaccine-induced V2 responses plausibly had a role in the partial protection conferred by the RV144 regimen.


Nature Medicine | 2011

Genetic impact of vaccination on breakthrough HIV-1 sequences from the STEP trial

Morgane Rolland; Sodsai Tovanabutra; Allan C. deCamp; Nicole Frahm; Peter B. Gilbert; Eric Sanders-Buell; Laura Heath; Craig A. Magaret; Meera Bose; Andrea Bradfield; Annemarie O'Sullivan; Jacqueline Crossler; Teresa Jones; Marty Nau; Kim Wong; Hong Zhao; Dana N. Raugi; Stephanie Sorensen; Julia N. Stoddard; Brandon Maust; Wenjie Deng; John Hural; Sheri A. Dubey; Nelson L. Michael; John W. Shiver; Lawrence Corey; Fusheng Li; Steve Self; Jerome H. Kim; Susan Buchbinder

We analyzed HIV-1 genome sequences from 68 newly infected volunteers in the STEP HIV-1 vaccine trial. To determine whether the vaccine exerted selective T cell pressure on breakthrough viruses, we identified potential T cell epitopes in the founder sequences and compared them to epitopes in the vaccine. We found greater distances to the vaccine sequence for sequences from vaccine recipients than from placebo recipients. The most significant signature site distinguishing vaccine from placebo recipients was Gag amino acid 84, a site encompassed by several epitopes contained in the vaccine and restricted by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles common in the study cohort. Moreover, the extended divergence was confined to the vaccine components of the virus (HIV-1 Gag, Pol and Nef) and not found in other HIV-1 proteins. These results represent what is to our knowledge the first evidence of selective pressure from vaccine-induced T cell responses on HIV-1 infection in humans.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Broad and Gag-Biased HIV-1 Epitope Repertoires Are Associated with Lower Viral Loads

Morgane Rolland; David Heckerman; Wenjie Deng; Christine Rousseau; Hoosen Mohamed Coovadia; Karen Bishop; Philip J. R. Goulder; Bruce D. Walker; Christian Brander; James I. Mullins

Background HLA class-I alleles differ in their ability to control HIV replication through cell-mediated immune responses. No consistent associations have been found between the breadth of Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL) responses and the control of HIV-1, and it is unknown whether the size or distribution of the viral proteome-wide epitope repertoire, i.e., the intrinsic ability to present fewer, more or specific viral epitopes, could affect clinical markers of disease progression. Methodology/Principal Findings We used an epitope prediction model to identify all epitope motifs in a set of 302 HIV-1 full-length proteomes according to each individuals HLA (Human Leukocyte Antigen) genotype. The epitope repertoire, i.e., the number of predicted epitopes per HIV-1 proteome, varied considerably between HLA alleles and thus among individual proteomes. In a subgroup of 270 chronically infected individuals, we found that lower viral loads and higher CD4 counts were associated with a larger predicted epitope repertoire. Additionally, in Gag and Rev only, more epitopes were restricted by alleles associated with low viral loads than by alleles associated with higher viral loads. Conclusions/Significance This comprehensive analysis puts forth the epitope repertoire as a mechanistic component of the multi-faceted HIV-specific CTL response. The favorable impact on markers of disease status of the propensity to present more HLA binding peptides and specific proteins gives impetus to vaccine design strategies that seek to elicit responses to a broad array of HIV-1 epitopes, and suggest a particular focus on Gag.


Bioinformatics | 2007

ViroBLAST: a stand-alone BLAST web server for flexible queries of multiple databases and user's datasets

Wenjie Deng; David C. Nickle; Gerald H. Learn; Brandon Maust; James I. Mullins

UNLABELLED ViroBLAST is a stand-alone BLAST web interface for nucleotide and amino acid sequence similarity searches. It extends the utility of BLAST to query against multiple sequence databases and user sequence datasets, and provides a friendly output to easily parse and navigate BLAST results. ViroBLAST is readily useful for all research areas that require BLAST functions and is available online and as a downloadable archive for independent installation. AVAILABILITY http://indra.mullins.microbiol.washington.edu/blast/viroblast.php.


BioTechniques | 2010

DIVEIN: a web server to analyze phylogenies, sequence divergence, diversity, and informative sites.

Wenjie Deng; Brandon Maust; David C. Nickle; Gerald H. Learn; Yi Liu; Laura Heath; Sergei L. Kosakovsky Pond; James I. Mullins

DIVEIN is a web interface that performs automated phylogenetic and other analyses of nucleotide and amino acid sequences. Starting with a set of aligned sequences, DIVEIN estimates evolutionary parameters and phylogenetic trees while allowing the user to choose from a variety of evolutionary models; it then reconstructs the consensus (CON), most recent common ancestor (MRCA), and center of tree (COT) sequences. DIVEIN also provides tools for further analyses, including condensing sequence alignments to show only informative sites or private mutations; computing phylogenetic or pairwise divergence from any user-specified sequence (CON, MRCA, COT, or existing sequence from the alignment); computing and outputting all genetic distances in column format; calculating summary statistics of diversity and divergence from pairwise distances; and graphically representing the inferred tree and plots of divergence, diversity, and distance distribution histograms. DIVEIN is available at http://indra.mullins.microbiol.washington.edu/DIVEIN.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2007

Coping with Viral Diversity in HIV Vaccine Design

David C. Nickle; Morgane Rolland; Mark A. Jensen; Sergei L. Kosakovsky Pond; Wenjie Deng; Mark Seligman; David Heckerman; James I. Mullins; Nebojsa Jojic

The ability of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to develop high levels of genetic diversity, and thereby acquire mutations to escape immune pressures, contributes to the difficulties in producing a vaccine. Possibly no single HIV-1 sequence can induce sufficiently broad immunity to protect against a wide variety of infectious strains, or block mutational escape pathways available to the virus after infection. The authors describe the generation of HIV-1 immunogens that minimizes the phylogenetic distance of viral strains throughout the known viral population (the center of tree [COT]) and then extend the COT immunogen by addition of a composite sequence that includes high-frequency variable sites preserved in their native contexts. The resulting COT+ antigens compress the variation found in many independent HIV-1 isolates into lengths suitable for vaccine immunogens. It is possible to capture 62% of the variation found in the Nef protein and 82% of the variation in the Gag protein into immunogens of three gene lengths. The authors put forward immunogen designs that maximize representation of the diverse antigenic features present in a spectrum of HIV-1 strains. These immunogens should elicit immune responses against high-frequency viral strains as well as against most mutant forms of the virus.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Demographic Processes Affect HIV-1 Evolution in Primary Infection before the Onset of Selective Processes

Joshua T. Herbeck; Morgane Rolland; Ying Liu; Sherry McLaughlin; John McNevin; Hong Zhao; Kim Wong; Julia N. Stoddard; Dana N. Raugi; S. Sorensen; Indira Genowati; Brian Birditt; A. McKay; Kurt Diem; Brandon Maust; Wenjie Deng; Ann C. Collier; Joanne D. Stekler; M. J. McElrath; James I. Mullins

ABSTRACT HIV-1 transmission and viral evolution in the first year of infection were studied in 11 individuals representing four transmitter-recipient pairs and three independent seroconverters. Nine of these individuals were enrolled during acute infection; all were men who have sex with men (MSM) infected with HIV-1 subtype B. A total of 475 nearly full-length HIV-1 genome sequences were generated, representing on average 10 genomes per specimen at 2 to 12 visits over the first year of infection. Single founding variants with nearly homogeneous viral populations were detected in eight of the nine individuals who were enrolled during acute HIV-1 infection. Restriction to a single founder variant was not due to a lack of diversity in the transmitter as homogeneous populations were found in recipients from transmitters with chronic infection. Mutational patterns indicative of rapid viral population growth dominated during the first 5 weeks of infection and included a slight contraction of viral genetic diversity over the first 20 to 40 days. Subsequently, selection dominated, most markedly in env and nef. Mutants were detected in the first week and became consensus as early as day 21 after the onset of symptoms of primary HIV infection. We found multiple indications of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) escape mutations while reversions appeared limited. Putative escape mutations were often rapidly replaced with mutually exclusive mutations nearby, indicating the existence of a maturational escape process, possibly in adaptation to viral fitness constraints or to immune responses against new variants. We showed that establishment of HIV-1 infection is likely due to a biological mechanism that restricts transmission rather than to early adaptive evolution during acute infection. Furthermore, the diversity of HIV strains coupled with complex and individual-specific patterns of CTL escape did not reveal shared sequence characteristics of acute infection that could be harnessed for vaccine design.


Virology | 2008

Env length and N-linked glycosylation following transmission of human immunodeficiency virus Type 1 subtype B viruses.

Yi Liu; Marcel E. Curlin; Kurt Diem; Hong Zhao; Ananta K. Ghosh; Haiying Zhu; Amanda Woodward; Janine Maenza; Claire E. Stevens; Joanne D. Stekler; Ann C. Collier; Indira Genowati; Wenjie Deng; Rafael Zioni; Lawrence Corey; Tuofu Zhu; James I. Mullins

Whether there is selection for specific viral Env variants upon HIV-1 transmission is controversial. We examined the V1V2 and V1V4 regions of Env in 10 new and 8 previously described transmission pairs infected with HIV-1 subtype B, including a total of 9 pairs in which the infecting partner had developed substantial viral diversity prior to transmission. We found that during transmission of HIV-1 subtype B, as well as for other subtypes reported in the past, viral populations in recipients undergo substantial genetic bottlenecks, as well as weak evidence for a propensity to replicate viruses with shorter variable loops and fewer potential N-linked glycosylation sites.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Hiv-1 envelope subregion length variation during disease progression

Marcel E. Curlin; Rafael Zioni; Stephen E. Hawes; Yi Liu; Wenjie Deng; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Tuofu Zhu; James I. Mullins

The V3 loop of the HIV-1 Env protein is the primary determinant of viral coreceptor usage, whereas the V1V2 loop region is thought to influence coreceptor binding and participate in shielding of neutralization-sensitive regions of the Env glycoprotein gp120 from antibody responses. The functional properties and antigenicity of V1V2 are influenced by changes in amino acid sequence, sequence length and patterns of N-linked glycosylation. However, how these polymorphisms relate to HIV pathogenesis is not fully understood. We examined 5185 HIV-1 gp120 nucleotide sequence fragments and clinical data from 154 individuals (152 were infected with HIV-1 Subtype B). Sequences were aligned, translated, manually edited and separated into V1V2, C2, V3, C3, V4, C4 and V5 subregions. V1-V5 and subregion lengths were calculated, and potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNLGS) counted. Loop lengths and PNLGS were examined as a function of time since infection, CD4 count, viral load, and calendar year in cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. V1V2 length and PNLGS increased significantly through chronic infection before declining in late-stage infection. In cross-sectional analyses, V1V2 length also increased by calendar year between 1984 and 2004 in subjects with early and mid-stage illness. Our observations suggest that there is little selection for loop length at the time of transmission; following infection, HIV-1 adapts to host immune responses through increased V1V2 length and/or addition of carbohydrate moieties at N-linked glycosylation sites. V1V2 shortening during early and late-stage infection may reflect ineffective host immunity. Transmission from donors with chronic illness may have caused the modest increase in V1V2 length observed during the course of the pandemic.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2010

Phylogenetic Analysis of Population-Based and Deep Sequencing Data to Identify Coevolving Sites in the nef Gene of HIV-1

Art F. Y. Poon; Luke C. Swenson; Winnie Dong; Wenjie Deng; Sergei L. Kosakovsky Pond; Zabrina L. Brumme; James I. Mullins; Douglas D. Richman; P. Richard Harrigan; Simon D. W. Frost

Rapidly evolving viruses such as HIV-1 display extensive sequence variation in response to host-specific selection, while simultaneously maintaining functions that are critical to replication and infectivity. This apparent conflict between diversifying and purifying selection may be resolved by an abundance of epistatic interactions such that the same functional requirements can be met by highly divergent sequences. We investigate this hypothesis by conducting an extensive characterization of sequence variation in the HIV-1 nef gene that encodes a highly variable multifunctional protein. Population-based sequences were obtained from 686 patients enrolled in the HOMER cohort in British Columbia, Canada, from which the distribution of nonsynonymous substitutions in the phylogeny was reconstructed by maximum likelihood. We used a phylogenetic comparative method on these data to identify putative epistatic interactions between residues. Two interactions (Y120/Q125 and N157/S169) were chosen to further investigate within-host evolution using HIV-1 RNA extractions from plasma samples from eight patients. Clonal sequencing confirmed strong linkage between polymorphisms at these sites in every case. We used massively parallel pyrosequencing (MPP) to reconstruct within-host evolution in these patients. Experimental error associated with MPP was quantified by performing replicates at two different stages of the protocol, which were pooled prior to analysis to reduce this source of variation. Phylogenetic reconstruction from these data revealed correlated substitutions at Y120/Q125 or N157/S169 repeated across multiple lineages in every host, indicating convergent within-host evolution shaped by epistatic interactions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Wenjie Deng's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Morgane Rolland

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brandon Maust

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hong Zhao

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kim Wong

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Sanders-Buell

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sodsai Tovanabutra

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge