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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2002, p. 89-94, Vol. 46, No. 1
0066-4804/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.1.89-94.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Prediction of Abacavir Resistance from Genotypic Data: Impact of Zidovudine and Lamivudine Resistance In Vitro and In Vivo
Hauke Walter, Barbara Schmidt,* Marianne Werwein, Eva Schwingel, and Klaus Korn
Institute of Clinical and Molecular Virology, German National Reference Centre for Retroviruses, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany
Received 26 April 2001/
Returned for modification 12 July 2001/
Accepted 1 October 2001

ABSTRACT
Abacavir is frequently used in antiretroviral combination therapies
as a potent nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI).
Four mutations are selected for by abacavir in vitro and in
vivo: K65R, L74V, Y115F, and M184V. Abacavir resistance has
also been observed in NRTI multidrug-resistant samples. Furthermore,
abacavir resistance has been described in the context of zidovudine
resistance. To evaluate the genetic basis of abacavir resistance,
the viral genotype and phenotypic resistance were analyzed for
307 patient samples. Low- and high-level resistances were defined
as 2.5- to 5.5-fold- and >5.5-fold-reduced susceptibility,
respectively. If all samples with abacavir-selected and NRTI
multidrug resistance-associated mutations were scored as resistant,
27.6% of the samples were misclassified, mainly due to samples
falsely scored as susceptible. Therefore, the relative frequencies
of other mutations were evaluated. Mutations at codons 44 and
118 were rarely detected in abacavir-susceptible samples but
were overrepresented in resistant samples. Site-directed mutagenesis
of E44D, V118I, and M184V resulted in low-level resistance for
the double mutant 44/184 and the triple mutant. Low-level abacavir
resistance was also detected for a viral clone carrying zidovudine
mutations only. Additional insertion of M184V into the zidovudine
background doubled the resistance, whereas 44/118 did not lead
to a further increase. Incorporating combinations of zidovudine
mutations and M184V into the scoring system markedly reduced
the number of misclassified samples, whereas 44/118 did not
improve the prediction. In conclusion, the combination of M184V
with zidovudine mutations gives rise to high-level abacavir
resistance, which may be clinically relevant. Thus, options
for useful sequential combinations of NRTI are limited.

INTRODUCTION
Since abacavir (1592U89) was approved as the sixth nucleoside
reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) in 1998, it has frequently
been used in antiretroviral combination therapies. Abacavir
is at least as potent as the other NRTIs, has good oral bioavailability,
and effectively penetrates into the central nervous system (
1,
5). Furthermore, abacavir has been shown to be synergistic in
combination with various antiretroviral drugs (
11,
22). The
combination with other NRTIs offers the opportunity of sparing
other classes of antiretroviral drugs for subsequent use. In
most cases, abacavir is well tolerated, with only minor side
effects (
9). A serious adverse event, a hypersensitivity reaction,
has been reported to occur in 3 to 5% of patients, which precludes
further use of abacavir in those patients (
4).
Four drug resistance-associated mutations have been reported to be selected for by abacavir in vitro: K65R, L74V, Y115F, and M184V (23). These mutations were also selected in vivo, except that the codon Y115F mutation is only rarely observed in patient samples (6, 17). Additionally, abacavir resistance has been observed for two patterns selected by other nucleoside analogues, which are associated with NRTI multidrug resistance (MDR), the Q151 M complex (24) and the family of amino acid insertions between codons 67 and 70 of the reverse transcriptase (14). Furthermore, abacavir resistance has been described in the context of zidovudine and lamivudine resistance: M184V was selected after in vitro passage of a zidovudine-resistant viral clone in the presence of abacavir (23), and in some clinical isolates an increase in abacavir resistance was observed after M184V had developed in the context of zidovudine resistance (6).
The most frequent mutation implicated in abacavir resistance is M184V; however, controversial data exist concerning the relevance of this mutation for abacavir resistance. On one hand, the use of abacavir selects for M184V in vitro and in vivo (6, 17). On the other hand, the presence of M184V does not seem to preclude an antiviral response to abacavir in combination therapy (11). However, in heavily pretreated patients with a high prevalence of zidovudine and lamivudine resistance at baseline, the use of abacavir was associated with minor success (13).
Therefore, we wanted to investigate resistance to abacavir in more detail, using a database of corresponding genotypic and phenotypic results. The aims were to clarify the role of lamivudine resistance for abacavir resistance and to develop a model for more precise prediction of resistance to this drug.
(This material was presented in part at Progress in Clinical Virology IV of the European Society for Clinical Virology, Hamburg, Germany, September 1998 [abstr. 212]; the 3rd European Symposion on the Clinical Implications of HIV Drug Resistance, Frankfurt, Germany, February 2001 [abstr. 14]; and the 5th International Workshop on HIV Drug Resistance and Treatment Strategies, Scottsdale, Ariz., June 2001 [abstr. 70].)

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Selection of samples.
A total of 307 samples were obtained from 257 patients being
treated at more than 20 outpatient centers and hospitals in
Germany. The samples had been sent to the German National Reference
Centre for Retroviruses for resistance testing between January
1998 and January 2000. Selection of samples was based on the
availability of genotypic and phenotypic results only. In most
cases, resistance testing was required because of permanently
high viremia or rebound of viral load under antiretroviral therapy.
Treatment histories were available for 229 of the 307 samples
(74.6%). Of these, 81 samples (35.4%) were derived from abacavir-experienced
patients.
Resistance testing.
Genotypic and phenotypic resistance tests were performed as described previously (20, 25). In brief, the genes for the protease and the relevant parts of the reverse transcriptase were amplified from patient plasma. Genotypic analysis was performed by direct sequencing of the product using dye terminators (Amersham, Cleveland, Ohio). Sequences were aligned with the Wisconsin Package version 10.0 (Genetics Computer Group, Madison, Wis.). The detection limit for minority species was about 30%. Resistance-associated mutations compiled by Schinazi et al. (19) were identified using the Stanford database (21). Phenotyping was performed by the recombinant-virus technique: the amplification product described above was cloned into a matched deletion mutant of the proviral human immunodeficiency virus type 1 clone NL4-3 (GenBank entry M19921). Viral stocks containing replication-competent recombinant viruses were obtained by transient transfection of 293T cells. A CEMx174-derived cell line containing the gene for the secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) under the control of the simian immunodeficiency virus long terminal repeat (15) was used as an indicator cell line for titration of virus stocks and for drug susceptibility testing. Testing of abacavir resistance was performed in triplicate in 96-well plates containing 25,000 cells per well. SEAP activity was determined after 3 days. The inoculum was standardized to yield 10,000 relative light units/well after 3 days of culture without drugs. The resistance factor (RF) was calculated by dividing the 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) for the respective recombinant virus by the IC50 for the nonresistant reference strain NL4-3, which was included in each independent assay.
Mutagenesis.
Viral clones were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis (10). For the insertion of E44D, V118I, and M184V into the pNL4-3 backbone, the following sense and antisense primers were used: E44D-s (5'-CAGAGATGGAAAAGGATGGGAA-3'), E44D-as (5'-TTTTCCCATCCTTTTCCATCTCT-3'), V118I-s (5'-TTTTTCAATTCCCTTAGATGAAGAC-3'), V118I-as (5'-GTCTTCATCTAAGGGAATTGAAAAA-3'), M184V-s (5'-TCTATCAATACGTGGATGATTTG-3'), and M184V-as (5'-CAAATCATCCACGTATTGATAGA-3'). For the construction of viral clones carrying zidovudine mutations, M41L was inserted with M41L-s (5'-TTGTACAGAGCTGGAAAAGGAA-3') and M41L-as (5'-TCCTTTTCCAGCTCTGTACAAA-3'). Two strategies were used for the insertion of L210W and T215Y: viral clones resulting from mutagenesis with primers L210W/T215Y-s (5'-CTGTGGAGGTGGGGACTTTACACACC-3')-and-L210W/T215Y-as(5'-GGTGTGTAAAGTCCCCACCTCCACAG-3') contained 211R and 214L, whereas the use of primers L210W/R211K/T215Y-s (5'-CTGTGGAAGTGGGGATTTTACACACC-3') and L210W/R211K/T215Y-as (5'-GGTGTGTAAAATCCCCACTTCCACAG-3') resulted in viral clones with R211K and L214F. The drug susceptibilities of viral clones were determined as described above with at least four independent runs for each clone.
Algorithms.
Algorithms for the prediction of abacavir resistance from genotypic data were evaluated for sensitivity (percentage of phenotypically resistant viruses that were also predicted to be resistant by the algorithm) and specificity (percentage of phenotypically susceptible viruses that were also predicted to be susceptible by the algorithm).

RESULTS
A total of 307 samples were retrospectively analyzed for abacavir
resistance. The IC
50 of abacavir for the nonresistant reference
virus NL4-3 was determined to be 4.58 ± 2.03 µM
in 16 independent assays, a finding which is similar to previously
published data (
6,
23). The sample set was divided into three
classes: samples with <2.5-fold resistance were defined as
susceptible, whereas 2.5- to 5.5-fold and >5.5-fold resistances
were used to distinguish between "low-level resistant" and "high-level
resistant" samples, respectively. The lower limit of 2.5-fold
was based on assay reproducibility. The upper limit of 5.5-fold
was arbitrarily chosen. According to the classification presented
above, 96 samples proved to be susceptible to abacavir, whereas
80 and 131 samples exhibited low- and high-level resistance,
respectively.
In a first step, the frequencies of abacavir-selected mutations and the NRTI MDR patterns were determined. Mutations K65R (n = 2) and Y115F (n = 2) were detected in three samples only, whereas NRTI MDR (n = 14), L74V (n = 33), and M184V (n = 135) occurred more frequently. Comparing the relative frequencies of these mutational patterns with respect to the level of resistance revealed that NRTI MDR and L74V were predominantly present in highly resistant samples, whereas M184V was frequently detected in samples with low- and high-level resistance (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Frequencies of mutations associated with resistance to abacavir in clinical isolates (n = 307), ranked with increasing resistance to abacavir
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To evaluate whether these mutational patterns were sufficient
to predict resistance to abacavir (RF > 2.5), samples were
scored as resistant if they contained K65R, L74V, Y115F, NRTI
MDR, or M184V. This resulted in a total of 85 misclassified
samples (27.6%). While a specificity of 86.5% was achieved,
sensitivity was considerably lower (65.9%). A low sensitivity
means by definition that a high proportion of samples which
are resistant in the phenotypic assay are predicted to be susceptible
by this algorithm. This suggested that additional mutations
were involved in abacavir resistance.
In a second step, the relative frequencies of other mutations were analyzed for abacavir-susceptible samples and for samples with low- and high-level resistance (Table 2). Mutations at codons 41, 67, 70, 210, 215, and 219 were detected in 9.4 to 24.0% of susceptible samples and two to three times more frequently in low-level resistant samples. In contrast, mutations at codons 44, 118, and 208 were present only in a very low percentage of abacavir-susceptible samples (2.1 to 5.2%) but were detected four to eight times more frequently in low-level resistant samples (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Frequencies of mutations associated with resistance to zidovudine and lamivudine in clinical isolates (n = 307), ranked with increasing resistance to abacavir
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At that time, mutations at codons 44 and 118 had not been described
as drug resistance associated. To investigate whether these
"new" mutations, as well as M184V, contribute to abacavir resistance,
the mutations were inserted into the nonresistant reference
virus NL4-3. The single mutants exhibited less than twofold-reduced
susceptibility to abacavir (MW01, MW02, and MW03) (Table
3).
A 3.1-fold-reduced susceptibility to abacavir was detected for
the double mutant 44/184 and the triple mutant 44/118/184 (MW05
and MW07).
After mutations E44D/A and V118I had been reported to be associated
with moderate resistance to lamivudine in the presence of zidovudine
mutations (
7), we wanted to investigate whether a similar mechanism
might be relevant for abacavir resistance. Thus, site-directed
mutagenesis was extended to include the mutations M41L, L210W,
and T215Y. These mutations were selected because their combination
represented the most frequent pattern of zidovudine mutations
in the clinical samples (107 of 237; 46.0%). In a first strategy,
viral clones were constructed which contained zidovudine and
lamivudine mutations in a background of 211R and 214L. However,
recombinant viruses resulting from this strategy (44/118/210/215,
44/118/184/215, 41/44/118/184/210/215, and 44/118/184/210/215)
replicated so poorly that resistance testing could not be performed.
Mutations R211K and L214F have been reported to be associated
with zidovudine and lamivudine dual resistance (
19). Thus, in
a second strategy, viral clones were constructed which contained
R211K in addition to L214F as a natural polymorphism of the
NL4-3 backbone. In this context, zidovudine mutations alone
were sufficient to obtain a 3.8-fold-reduced susceptibility
to abacavir (MW08) (Table
3). The additional presence of E44D
and V118I added only a slight increase in abacavir resistance
(MW09). An eightfold-reduced susceptibility to abacavir, however,
was detected for M184V in addition to zidovudine mutations (MW10).
In this context, E44D and V118I did not lead to any further
increase of resistance (MW11).
To clarify the discrepancy between the relative frequencies of mutations E44D/A and V118I in abacavir-resistant samples and their minor role in the clonal analyses, their relative frequencies were determined in clinical isolates with or without zidovudine resistance mutations (M41L, D67N, K70R, L210W, T215Y/F/C, and K219Q/E/R) and/or M184V/I. Both E44D/A and V118I were virtually absent in samples without any zidovudine resistance mutation, irrespective of the presence of M184V/I (Fig. 1). However, these mutations were detected in 18.6 to 31.0% of samples carrying at least one zidovudine mutation without M184V/I and with a similar frequency (23.1 to 23.9%) in samples carrying zidovudine mutations and M184V/I. The same distribution could be seen for H208Y, which has been linked to zidovudine and lamivudine dual resistance (16).
Based on the analysis of clinical samples and the results of
the mutagenesis, different algorithms were evaluated for the
prediction of abacavir resistance. Mutations K65R and Y115F
were excluded from this evaluation, because they were too rare
for a meaningful analysis. For the prediction of low-level abacavir
resistance (RF > 2.5), the lowest number of misclassified
samples (
n = 43; 14.0%) was achieved by the algorithm "presence
of L74V or NRTI MDR or M184V or any two mutations of 41/210/215,"
which resulted in 91.9% sensitivity and 72.9% specificity. For
the prediction of high-level resistance only (RF > 5.5),
the best sensitivity (87.8%) and specificity (76.7%) were obtained
for the algorithm "presence of L74V or NRTI MDR or any three
mutations of 41/184/210/215," resulting in 57 misclassified
samples (18.6%). Inclusion of E44D/A and/or V118I did not improve
the algorithms. This was also true for H208Y and for D67N and/or
K70R, respectively.

DISCUSSION
This study confirmed that both M184V and zidovudine mutations
contribute to abacavir resistance. In addition to the use of
previously published data (
6,
23), both a systematic analysis
of clinical samples and site-directed mutagenesis were performed.
Site-directed mutagenesis proved that the combination of both
patterns had a synergistic effect on abacavir resistance, which
is in contrast to the reduction of zidovudine resistance observed
after the introduction of M184V. This was further supported
by the evaluation of algorithms in clinical samples: low-level
abacavir resistance could be predicted from the presence of
either M184V or zidovudine mutations, whereas the presence of
at least three mutations from a combination of zidovudine mutations
and M184V was required for the prediction of high-level abacavir
resistance. For both algorithms, most of the misclassified samples
had resistance factors close to the chosen cutoffs (data not
shown). Samples with resistance factors higher than two times
the cutoff value were very rare (3 of 43 and 3 of 57 samples
for the prediction of low-level and high-level resistance, respectively).
The majority of misclassified samples were phenotypically susceptible
but were classified as resistant, which is a conservative approach.
Since these algorithms have been developed to predict the phenotype
from the genotype, they still have to be evaluated for clinical
relevance.
Some other mutations have been reported to develop in the context of zidovudine and lamivudine dual resistance: H208Y, R211K/L214F, and G333E/D (12, 16, 19). The role of mutations at codon 333 of the reverse transcriptase could not be evaluated, because the patient-derived part of the recombinant viruses only contained the first 300 amino acids of the reverse transcriptase. Mutations R211K and L214F were investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Sufficiently replicating viruses were only obtained if these mutations were additionally present in a background of zidovudine mutations and M184V. This suggests that these mutations are important for the fitness of such viruses, facilitating zidovudine and lamivudine dual resistance. However, since viruses with zidovudine mutations and M184V without R211K and L214F were observed in patient samples, this is not an essential requirement.
A role for H208Y in abacavir resistance may be suspected from the overrepresentation of this mutation in resistant clinical samples. However, similar to E44D/A and V118I, mutation H208Y was virtually absent in isolates without other zidovudine resistance-associated mutations and seemed to appear independently of the presence of M184V/I (Fig. 1). For E44D and V118I, this distribution has already been described (3, 7). Additionally, none of these three mutations improved the prediction of abacavir resistance in clinical isolates. This supports the idea that these mutations are overrepresented in abacavir-resistant samples because they frequently develop in the context of zidovudine resistance. Thus, these mutations are good indicator mutations for abacavir resistance but do not necessarily contribute to abacavir resistance themselves.
The direct effect of mutations E44D and V118I was also assessed by site-directed mutagenesis. A slight increase in abacavir resistance was observed for viral clones carrying E44D compared to the respective clones without this mutation (MW05 versus MW03, MW07 versus MW06, and MW09 versus MW08), except for the highly resistant viruses (MW11 versus MW10). A similar effect could not be seen for the mutation V118I. Thus, the possibility that E44D may increase abacavir resistance in viruses with certain combinations of drug resistance-associated mutations cannot be excluded. Mutations E44D and V118I were originally reported to be associated with moderate resistance to lamivudine in the presence of zidovudine mutations (7). Thus, these mutations represent an alternative way for zidovudine-resistant viruses to acquire lamivudine resistance under simultaneous pressure of zidovudine and lamivudine. In contrast to M184V, resistance to lamivudine is only moderate, but it may be sufficient to enable replication under clinical conditions. However, the advantage compared to M184V is that zidovudine resistance is not reversed by E44D and V118I. Another aspect may be that E44D and V118I are possibly involved in resistance to other NRTIs. Thus, these mutations may be involved in abacavir resistance by a mechanism facilitating NRTI cross-resistance.
A problem in all studies of human immunodeficiency virus drug resistance is the definition of cutoff values to discriminate susceptible from resistant samples (2, 8, 18). In our study, the lower cutoff was defined according to technical restrictions, being based on assay reproducibility. The upper cutoff was arbitrarily chosen. Two cutoffs were chosen to address the point that drug resistance and consecutive treatment failure evolve as a continuum, i.e., the higher the resistance level, the more likely is therapy failure. Furthermore, the determination of meaningful cutoffs for phenotypic assays is still difficult. Recently, data on clinical cutoffs for abacavir resistance were presented (E. R. Lanier, N. Hellmann, J. Scott, M. Ait-Khaled, T. Melby, E. Paxinos, H. Werhane, C. Petropoulos, E. Kusaba, M. St. Clair, L. Smiley, and S. Lafon, 8th Conf. Retrovir. Opportunistic Infect., abstr. 254, 2001). In this study, response to abacavir in combination therapy was significantly worse if patients carried viruses with 4.5- to 6.5-fold-reduced susceptibility than if they carried viruses with less than 4.5-fold-reduced susceptibility. Therapy response was virtually absent if viruses with more than 6.5-fold-reduced susceptibility were present. Thus, the upper cutoff value that we have arbitrarily chosen is in the same range as these clinical cutoffs, although two different virus assays cannot be compared directly.
Finally, this study showed some interesting results concerning the role of M184V for abacavir resistance: the introduction of the single mutation into a wild-type background did not confer substantial abacavir resistance, which may explain why the presence of M184V alone does not preclude a therapy response to abacavir (11, 17). Nevertheless, since M184V is rapidly selected in the presence of abacavir in vitro and in vivo, this single-base mutation must confer some selective advantage (6). With M184V alone, this advantage may be very small, and possibly the slightly higher average resistance factor of 1.5 measured in the site-directed mutagenesis is an indicator of this advantage. If additional mutations are acquired, resistance increases to higher levels, which are more likely to be clinically relevant. These may be zidovudine resistance-associated mutations, which can be selected for by pretreatment with zidovudine and lamivudine as well as with stavudine and lamivudine. These combinations are frequent in the treatment history of heavily pretreated patients, which may explain the low success rate of abacavir in such patients (13).
In conclusion, our study supports the concept that cross-resistance is frequent not only within the classes of protease inhibitors and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, but also within the class of NRTIs. Thus, the results of our study may have implications for daily clinical practice because they indicate that options for useful sequential NRTI combinations are limited.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank B. Fleckenstein for helpful discussion and continuous
support. The indicator cell line was kindly provided by R. E.
Means and R. C. Desrosiers.
We are also indebted to T. Harrer and M. Schmitt (Erlangen, Germany); M. Helm, G. Abelein, and W. Brockhaus (Nürnberg, Germany); L. Schneider (Fürth, Germany); S. Mauss, G. Schmutz, and T. Niehues (Düsseldorf, Germany); P. Braun and H. Knechten (Aachen, Germany); J. A. Rump (Freiburg, Germany); R. Billhardt (Offenburg, Germany); F. Schlote, E. Lauenroth-Mai, C. Schauenburg, F. Krauthausen, and M. Vocks-Hauck (Berlin, Germany); A. Groh and M. Scholz (Jena, Germany); U. Oesen and U. Bohr (Magdeburg, Germany); and C.-J. Reiß (Halle, Germany) for providing clinical samples. Zidovudine, lamivudine, and abacavir were kindly provided by GlaxoSmithKline.
Financial support was provided by grants from the Bayerische Staatsministerium für Kultus, Erziehung und Wissenschaft (K. Korn) and the Robert Koch-Institute, Berlin, Germany (National Reference Centre for Retroviruses).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Present address: Institute of Clinical and Molecular Virology, German National Reference Centre for Retroviruses, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Schlossgarten 4, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany. Phone: 49-9131-85-24010. Fax: 49-9131-85-26485. E-mail:
baschmid{at}viro.med.uni-erlangen.de.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2002, p. 89-94, Vol. 46, No. 1
0066-4804/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.1.89-94.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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