The ability of HIV-1 to rapidly mutate leads to antiretroviral therapy (ART) failure among infected patients. Drug-resistance mutations (DRMs), which cause a fitness penalty to intrinsic viral fitness, are compensated by accessory mutations with favorable epistatic interactions which cause an evolutionary trapping effect, but the kinetics of this overall process has not been well characterized. Here, using a Potts Hamiltonian model describing epistasis combined with kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of evolutionary trajectories, we explore how epistasis modulates the evolutionary dynamics of HIV DRMs. We show how the occurrence of a drug-resistance mutation is contingent on favorable epistatic interactions with many other residues of the sequ...
<div><p>The evolution of drug resistance in HIV occurs by the fixation of specific, well-known, drug...
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves with extraordinary rapidity. However, its evolution is co...
Copyright: © 2020 Zhang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Cre...
The ability of HIV-1 to rapidly mutate leads to antiretroviral therapy (ART) failure among infected ...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Despite the use of combination antiretroviral drugs for the treatment of HIV-1 infection, the emerge...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
Despite the use of combination antiretroviral drugs for the treatment of HIV-1 infection, the emerge...
International audienceFitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly...
HIV can evolve remarkably quickly in response to antiretroviral therapies and the immune system. Thi...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
<div><p>The evolution of drug resistance in HIV occurs by the fixation of specific, well-known, drug...
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves with extraordinary rapidity. However, its evolution is co...
Copyright: © 2020 Zhang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Cre...
The ability of HIV-1 to rapidly mutate leads to antiretroviral therapy (ART) failure among infected ...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Despite the use of combination antiretroviral drugs for the treatment of HIV-1 infection, the emerge...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
New antiretroviral drugs that offer large genetic barriers to resistance, such as the recently appro...
Despite the use of combination antiretroviral drugs for the treatment of HIV-1 infection, the emerge...
International audienceFitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly...
HIV can evolve remarkably quickly in response to antiretroviral therapies and the immune system. Thi...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
Fitness interactions between mutations, referred to as epistasis, can strongly impact evolution. For...
<div><p>The evolution of drug resistance in HIV occurs by the fixation of specific, well-known, drug...
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves with extraordinary rapidity. However, its evolution is co...
Copyright: © 2020 Zhang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Cre...