Publications by authors named "Ushnal Rao"

Article Synopsis
  • In vitro fitness assays are crucial for evaluating the replication fitness of viruses like HIV-1, using various metrics such as viral particle count and growth rate in cell cultures.
  • Growth competition assays are highlighted as the most sensitive method for measuring fitness, focusing on how viruses compete for the same cellular resources under controlled conditions.
  • The protocol outlined covers the process from creating a recombinant HIV-1 clone to conducting growth competition assays, emphasizing the importance of experimental parameters and providing flexibility in detection methods to accommodate different lab capabilities.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It has been hypothesized that a single mutation at a highly conserved amino acid site (HCS) can be severely deleterious to HIV in most if not all isolate-specific genetic backgrounds. Consequently, potentially universal HIV-1 vaccines exclusively targeting highly conserved regions of the viral proteome have been proposed. To test this hypothesis, we examined the impact of 10 Gag-p24 and 9 Env-gp120 HCS single mutations on viral fitness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers developed a real-time TaqMan PCR technique to measure and compare the viral fitness of engineered HIV-1 chimeric viruses with different genetic modifications.
  • * They specifically quantified the impact of eight amino acid changes in key regions of the virus (HIV-1 Gag and Env) by comparing the growth rates of mutant and native viral forms in cell cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The deoxycytidine analog KP1212, and its prodrug KP1461, are prototypes of a new class of antiretroviral drugs designed to increase viral mutation rates, with the goal of eventually causing the collapse of the viral population. Here we present an extensive analysis of viral sequences from HIV-1 infected volunteers from the first "mechanism validation" phase II clinical trial of a mutagenic base analog in which individuals previously treated with antiviral drugs received 1600 mg of KP1461 twice per day for 124 days. Plasma viral loads were not reduced, and overall levels of viral mutation were not increased during this short-term study, however, the mutation spectrum of HIV was altered.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Several recent reports indicate that cholesterol might play an important role in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication. We investigated the effects of HIV-1 infection on cholesterol biosynthesis and uptake using microarrays. HIV-1 increased gene expression of cholesterol genes in both transformed T-cell lines and primary CD4(+) T cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF