RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Inference of epistatic effects leading to entrenchment and drug resistance in HIV-1 protease JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 063750 DO 10.1101/063750 A1 William F. Flynn A1 Allan Haldane A1 Bruce E. Torbett A1 Ronald M. Levy YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/11/02/063750.abstract AB Understanding the complex mutation patterns that give rise to drug resistant viral strains provides a foundation for developing more effective treatment strategies for HIV/AIDS. Multiple sequence alignments of drug-experienced HIV-1 protease sequences contain networks of many pair correlations which can be used to build a (Potts) Hamiltonian model of these mutation patterns. Using this Hamiltonian model we translate HIV protease sequence covariation data into quantitative predictions for the probability of observing specific mutation patterns which are in agreement with the observed sequence statistics. We find that the statistical energies of the Potts model are correlated with the fitness of individual proteins containing therapy-associated mutations as estimated by in vitro measurements of protein stability and viral infectivity. We show that the penalty for acquiring primary resistance mutations depends on the epistatic interactions with the sequence background. Primary mutations which lead to drug resistance can become highly advantageous (or entrenched) by the complex mutation patterns which arise in response to drug therapy despite being destabilizing in the wildtype background. Anticipating epistatic effects is important for the design of future protease inhibitor therapies.