Yolanda Vega
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yolanda Vega.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2012
Elena Delgado; Aurora Fernández-García; Yolanda Vega; Teresa Cuevas; Milagros Pinilla; Valentina García; Mónica Sánchez; María del Mar González; Ana M. Sánchez; Michael M. Thomson; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of genotypic methods for predicting the co-receptor usage of subtypes B and non-B HIV-1 primary isolates, using as gold standard the infectivity of each primary isolate in GHOST cells stably expressing HIV-1 co-receptors. METHODS Primary isolates were obtained by co-culturing either patients peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or ultracentrifuged plasma with donor-activated PBMCs. In vitro co-receptor usage was determined by infecting GHOST cells. Tropism prediction, based on V3 sequences, was determined with simple rules and bioinformatic tools (Geno2pheno[coreceptor] and WebPSSM). RESULTS This study includes 102 HIV-1 primary isolates; 23 (22.5%) subtype B and 79 (77.5%) non-B genetic forms. V3 sequences were classified into six subtypes (A-G), although 32 (31.4%) were circulating recombinant forms and 21 (20.6%) were unique recombinant forms. Sixty-nine isolates were R5, 27 R5X4 and 6 X4. The highest levels of sensitivity and specificity for the detection of X4 strains among V3 sequences, between 91% and 100%, were obtained by using PSSM(x4r5), PSSM(si/nsi) and the 11/25 rule for sequences of subtypes A, B and G, but not for subtype F. Establishing the recommended cut-off for clinical settings of a 10% false positive rate for Geno2pheno, we obtained 93% specificity and 97% sensitivity. CONCLUSIONS Comparing genotypic assays for HIV-1 co-receptor use with a cell-culture phenotypic assay could provide more reliable results of sensitivity and specificity for the detection of X4 strains than comparing them with recombinant assays, considered as gold standard. In general, except for subtype F isolates, there is a good correlation for tropism prediction.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2009
Michael M. Thomson; Anna Vinogradova; Elena Delgado; Aza Rakhmanova; Aleksey Yakovlev; María Teresa Cuevas; Mercedes Muñoz; Milagros Pinilla; Yolanda Vega; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Saladin Osmanov; Rafael Nájera
Objectives:To examine HIV-1 genetic diversity in St. Petersburg. Methods:Partial HIV-1 pol sequences from 102 plasma samples collected in 2006 were analyzed with a Bayesian phylogeny inference method. Results:Subtype A, former Soviet Union (FSU) variant (AFSU), was the predominant clade (89.3%); other clades were subtypes B (9.7%) and F1 (1%). AFSU was predominant both among injecting drug users (98.2%) and heterosexually infected individuals (91.4%), whereas subtype B was more prevalent among homosexual men (75%). Within the AFSU variant, most sequences (93.5%) branched within 1 of 4 strongly supported subclusters. The largest comprised 63% AFSU viruses and was uncommon outside St Petersburg. A second subcluster (17.4% AFSU viruses) corresponds to the variant with the V77I substitution in protease, which is widely circulating in different FSU countries. Two minor subclusters comprised 8.7% and 6.5% AFSU viruses, respectively. There was no correlation between risk exposure and AFSU subclusters. Six of 8 subtype B sequences, 4 of them from homosexual men, grouped in a monophyletic subcluster. Conclusions:The results of this study show a great predominance of AFSU viruses in St Petersburg and point to a few phylogenetically identifiable introductions as the origin of most current HIV-1 AFSU infections in the city.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Yolanda Vega; Elena Delgado; Aurora Fernández-García; María Teresa Cuevas; Michael M. Thomson; Vanessa Montero; Mónica Sánchez; Ana M. Sánchez; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Basque Country
Our objectives were to carry out an epidemiological surveillance study on transmitted drug resistance (TDR) among individuals newly diagnosed of HIV-1 infection during a nine year period in Spain and to assess the role of transmission clusters (TC) in the propagation of resistant strains. An overall of 1614 newly diagnosed individuals were included in the study from January 2004 through December 2012. Individuals come from two different Spanish regions: Galicia and the Basque Country. Resistance mutations to reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTI) and protease inhibitors (PI) were analyzed according to mutations included in the surveillance drug-resistance mutations list updated in 2009. TC were defined as those comprising viruses from five or more individuals whose sequences clustered in maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees with a bootstrap value ≥90%. The overall prevalence of TDR to any drug was 9.9%: 4.9% to nucleoside RTIs (NRTIs), 3.6% to non-nucleoside RTIs (NNRTIs), and 2.7% to PIs. A significant decrease of TDR to NRTIs over time was observed [from 10% in 2004 to 2% in 2012 (p=0.01)]. Sixty eight (42.2%) of 161 sequences with TDR were included in 25 TC composed of 5 or more individuals. Of them, 9 clusters harbored TDR associated with high level resistance to antiretroviral drugs. T215D revertant mutation was transmitted in a large cluster comprising 25 individuals. The impact of epidemiological networks on TDR frequency may explain its persistence in newly diagnosed individuals. The knowledge of the populations involved in TC would facilitate the design of prevention programs and public health interventions.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2013
Francisco Díez-Fuertes; Elena Delgado; Yolanda Vega; Aurora Fernández-García; María Teresa Cuevas; Milagros Pinilla; Valentina García; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Michael M. Thomson
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to develop a genotypic method to predict HIV-1 coreceptor usage by employing the nucleotide sequence of the env gene in a tree-augmented naive Bayes (TAN) classifier, and to evaluate its accuracy in prediction compared with other available tools. METHODS A wrapper data-mining strategy interleaved with a TAN algorithm was employed to evaluate the predictor value of every single-nucleotide position throughout the HIV-1 env gene. Based on these results, different nucleotide positions were selected to develop a TAN classifier, which was employed to predict the coreceptor tropism of all the full-length env gene sequences with information on coreceptor tropism currently available at the Los Alamos HIV Sequence Database. RESULTS Employing 26 nucleotide positions in the TAN classifier, an accuracy of 95.6%, a specificity (identification of CCR5-tropic viruses) of 99.4% and a sensitivity (identification of CXCR4/dual-tropic viruses) of 80.5% were achieved for the in silico cross-validation. Compared with the phenotypic determination of coreceptor usage, the TAN algorithm achieved more accurate predictions than WebPSSM and Geno2pheno [coreceptor] (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS The use of the methodology presented in this work constitutes a robust strategy to identify genetic patterns throughout the HIV-1 env gene differently present in CCR5-tropic and CXCR4/dual-tropic viruses. Moreover, the TAN classifier can be used as a genotypic tool to predict the coreceptor usage of HIV-1 isolates reaching more accurate predictions than with other widely used genotypic tools. The use of this algorithm could improve the correct prescribing of CCR5 antagonist drugs to HIV-1-infected patients.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Elena Delgado; María Teresa Cuevas; Francisco Domínguez; Yolanda Vega; Marina Cabello; Aurora Fernández-García; Marcos Pérez-Losada; María Ángeles Castro; Vanessa Montero; Mónica Sánchez; Ana Mariño; Hortensia Álvarez; Patricia Ordóñez; Antonio Ocampo; Celia Miralles; Sonia Pérez-Castro; María José López-Álvarez; Raúl Rodríguez; Matilde Trigo; Julio Diz-Arén; Carmen Hinojosa; Pablo Bachiller; Silvia Hernáez-Crespo; Ramón Cisterna; Eugenio Garduño; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Michael M. Thomson
We recently reported the rapid expansion of an HIV-1 subtype F cluster among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the region of Galicia, Northwest Spain. Here we update this outbreak, analyze near full-length genomes, determine phylogenetic relationships, and estimate its origin. For this study, we used sequences of HIV-1 protease-reverse transcriptase and env V3 region, and for 17 samples, near full-length genome sequences were obtained. Phylogenetic analyses were performed via maximum likelihood. Locations and times of most recent common ancestors were estimated using Bayesian inference. Among samples analyzed by us, 100 HIV-1 F1 subsubtype infections of monophyletic origin were diagnosed in Spain, including 88 in Galicia and 12 in four other regions. Most viruses (n = 90) grouped in a subcluster (Galician subcluster), while 7 from Valladolid (Central Spain) grouped in another subcluster. At least 94 individuals were sexually-infected males and at least 71 were MSM. Seventeen near full-length genomes were uniformly of F1 subsubtype. Through similarity searches and phylogenetic analyses, we identified 18 viruses from four other Western European countries [Switzerland (n = 8), Belgium (n = 5), France (n = 3), and United Kingdom (n = 2)] and one from Brazil, from samples collected in 2005–2011, which branched within the subtype F cluster, outside of both Spanish subclusters, most of them corresponding to recently infected individuals. The most probable geographic origin and age of the Galician subcluster was Ferrol, Northwest Galicia, around 2007, while the Western European cluster probably emerged in Switzerland around 2002. In conclusion, a recently expanded HIV-1 subtype F cluster, the largest non-subtype B cluster reported in Western Europe, continues to spread among MSM in Spain; this cluster is part of a larger cluster with a wide geographic circulation in diverse Western European countries.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005
Yolanda Vega; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Elena Delgado; Mercedes Muñoz; Gema Casado; Rocío Carmona; María Sierra; Elena Vázquez-de Parga; Milagros Pinilla; Valentina García; Leandro Medrano; Gerardo Contreras; Miguel Thomson; Rafael Nájera
ABSTRACT The oligonucleotide ligation assay is a genotypic assay for the detection of resistance-associated mutations to reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitors in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 subtype B. This assay has been modified and developed for non-B subtypes and recombinant strains and has been evaluated with sequencing, resulting in a more sensitive assay than sequencing for non-B subtypes.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2014
Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Elena Delgado; Yolanda Vega; Vanessa Montero; Teresa Cuevas; Aurora Fernández-García; Beatriz García-Riart; Sonia Pérez-Castro; Ricardo Rodríguez-Real; María José López-Álvarez; Ricardo Fernández-Rodríguez; María Jesús Lezaun; Patricia Ordóñez; Carmen Ramos; Elena Bereciartua; Sara Calleja; Ana Mª Sánchez-García; Michael M. Thomson
OBJECTIVES R5-tropic viruses are associated with HIV-1 transmission and predominate during the early stages of infection. X4-tropic populations have been detected in ~50% of patients with late-stage disease infected with subtype B viruses. In this study, we compared the frequency of X4 tropism in individuals infected with HIV-1 CRF14_BG viruses, which have a V3 loop of subtype B, with a control group of individuals infected with subtype B viruses. METHODS Sixty-three individuals infected with HIV-1 CRF14_BG (n = 31) or subtype B (n = 32) were studied. Similar proportions of newly diagnosed and chronically infected individuals were included in the subtype B and CRF14_BG groups. V3 sequences were obtained and coreceptor tropism was predicted using the Geno2pheno[coreceptor] algorithm. V3 net charge and 11/25 rules were also used for coreceptor prediction. RESULTS Overall, X4 tropism was more frequent among individuals infected with CRF14_BG viruses (87.1%) than subtype B viruses (34.3%), a difference that was statistically highly significant (P = 0.00001). Importantly, the frequencies among newly diagnosed individuals were 90% and 13.3%, respectively (P = 0.0007). Characteristic amino acids in the V3 loop (T13, M14, V19 and W20) were identified at higher frequencies in CRF14_BG viruses (54%) than subtype B viruses (0%; P < 0.000001). CONCLUSIONS CRF14_BG is the genetic form with the highest proportion of X4-tropic viruses reported to date in newly diagnosed and chronic infections. This suggests high pathogenicity for CRF14_BG viruses, potentially leading to rapid disease progression. CCR5 antagonists will be ineffective in most CRF14_BG-infected patients, even at early stages of infection.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Yolanda Vega; Elena Delgado; Jorge de la Barrera; Cristina Carrera; Ángel Zaballos; Isabel Cuesta; Ana Mariño; Antonio Ocampo; Celia Miralles; Sonia Pérez-Castro; Hortensia Álvarez; Isabel López-Miragaya; Elena García-Bodas; Francisco Díez-Fuertes; Michael M. Thomson
HIV-1 RNAs are generated through a complex splicing mechanism, resulting in a great diversity of transcripts, which are classified in three major categories: unspliced, singly spliced (SS), and doubly spliced (DS). Knowledge on HIV-1 RNA splicing in vivo and by non-subtype B viruses is scarce. Here we analyze HIV-1 RNA splice site usage in CD4+CD25+ lymphocytes from HIV-1-infected individuals through pyrosequencing. HIV-1 DS and SS RNAs were amplified by RT-PCR in 19 and 12 samples, respectively. 13,108 sequences from HIV-1 spliced RNAs, derived from viruses of five subtypes (A, B, C, F, G), were identified. In four samples, three of non-B subtypes, five 3’ splice sites (3’ss) mapping to unreported positions in the HIV-1 genome were identified. Two, designated A4i and A4j, were used in 22% and 25% of rev RNAs in two viruses of subtypes B and A, respectively. Given their close proximity (one or two nucleotides) to A4c and A4d, respectively, they could be viewed as variants of these sites. Three 3’ss, designated A7g, A7h, and A7i, located 20, 32, and 18 nucleotides downstream of A7, respectively, were identified in a subtype C (A7g, A7h) and a subtype G (A7i) viruses, each in around 2% of nef RNAs. The new splice sites or variants of splice sites were associated with the usual sequence features of 3’ss. Usage of unusual 3’ss A4d, A4e, A5a, A7a, and A7b was also detected. A4f, previously identified in two subtype C viruses, was preferentially used by rev RNAs of a subtype C virus. These results highlight the great diversity of in vivo splice site usage by HIV-1 RNAs. The fact that four of five newly identified splice sites or variants of splice sites were detected in non-subtype B viruses allows anticipating an even greater diversity of HIV-1 splice site usage than currently known.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Aurora Fernández-García; Elena Delgado; María Teresa Cuevas; Yolanda Vega; Vanessa Montero; Mónica Sánchez; Cristina Carrera; María José López-Álvarez; Celia Miralles; Sonia Pérez-Castro; Gustavo Cilla; Carmen Hinojosa; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Michael Thomson
HIV-1 exhibits a characteristically high genetic diversity, with the M group, responsible for the pandemic, being classified into nine subtypes, 72 circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) and numerous unique recombinant forms (URFs). Here we characterize the near full-length genome sequence of an HIV-1 BG intersubtype recombinant virus (X3208) collected in Galicia (Northwest Spain) which exhibits a mosaic structure coincident with that of a previously characterized BG recombinant virus (9601_01), collected in Germany and epidemiologically linked to Portugal, and different from currently defined CRFs. Similar recombination patterns were found in partial genome sequences from three other BG recombinant viruses, one newly derived, from a virus collected in Spain, and two retrieved from databases, collected in France and Portugal, respectively. Breakpoint coincidence and clustering in phylogenetic trees of these epidemiologically-unlinked viruses allow to define a new HIV-1 CRF (CRF73_BG). CRF73_BG shares one breakpoint in the envelope with CRF14_BG, which circulates in Portugal and Spain, and groups with it in a subtype B envelope fragment, but the greatest part of its genome does not appear to derive from CRF14_BG, although both CRFs share as parental strain the subtype G variant circulating in the Iberian Peninsula. Phylogenetic clustering of partial pol and env segments from viruses collected in Portugal and Spain with X3208 and 9691_01 indicates that CRF73_BG is circulating in both countries, with proportions of around 2–3% Portuguese database HIV-1 isolates clustering with CRF73_BG. The fact that an HIV-1 recombinant virus characterized ten years ago as a URF has been shown to represent a CRF suggests that the number of HIV-1 CRFs may be much greater than currently known.
Journal of Clinical Virology | 2005
Rocío Carmona; Lucía Pérez-Álvarez; Mercedes Muñoz; Gema Casado; Elena Delgado; María Sierra; Miguel Thomson; Yolanda Vega; E. Vázquez de Parga; Gerardo Contreras; Leandro Medrano; Rafael Nájera