s in evolution of X4 variants. Further clarification of the key-role of the thymus and other lymphoid tissues in the evolution/amplification of X4 strains might have important consequences for the development of effective therapeutic strategies. R5 coreceptor-blocking agents may be extremely efficient, during the early stage of the disease, in avoiding the emergence of the X4 quasispecies associated with certain types of disease progression. On the other hand, the development of X4 entry inhibitors and/or drugs able to target the export of X4 infected T-cells from the thymus could be critical to control HIV-1 infection in advanced disease stages. If breakdown of immunity contributes to selection for X4 variants, then immune-based Kenpaullone strategies may delay or prevent amplification of X4-using viruses independent of the tissue of origin. A detailed mapping of V1-V3 sites under positive selection associated with increased viral entry efficiency will lay the foundations for the 14500812 development and evaluation of such novel drugs, and our study has shown the potential power of phylodynamics and highresolution phylogeny for accomplishing this important task. MATERIALS AND METHODS Subjects and samples Four pediatric subjects infected by maternal HIV-1 transmission or by neonatal blood transfusion were enrolled under a protocol approved by the Institutional Review Board of the University of Florida, College of Medicine. The mothers of the children enrolled in the study has already given consent for the collection and storage of blood and tissue samples and for collection of clinical data as part of the protocol In Vivo Evolution of HIV-1 X4 implemented in Dr. Goodenow’s lab entitled: Biological implications of HIV-1 genetic variability. All patients developed AIDS before one year of age, and died of AIDS-related illnesses by 8 months, 26 months, 6.5 years, or 7.5 years of age. Subjects received antiretroviral therapy with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, but no combination therapy with non-NRTI or protease inhibitors. Tissues including lung, mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, thymus, and brain were obtained post mortem, while peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained at or near the time of death for all subjects and over the course of infection for S2, and S4. In patient S4 brain tissues were mostly sampled from the frontal lobe. DNA was extracted from cryopreserved PBMC samples as previously described. Tissues were quick frozen in liquid nitrogen in 50 ml conical tubes and stored at 280uC until processed for DNA extraction. DNA was extracted from multiple biopsies from each tissue using the Dneasy tissue extraction kit . Several DNA extractions from each tissue were pooled together, and multiple PCR amplifications were performed on the combined DNA extraction to ensure representation of viral sequences within a tissue. Recombination analysis HIV-1 gp120 env sequences from all individuals were evaluated in a single phylogenetic tree that verified the integrity of the data. Separate phylogenetic trees for V1-V2 and C2-V3 domains were also obtained to detect putative recombinant sequences that may cluster differently in different trees. The presence of recombination was confirmed with the PHI test, which is based on the notion of refined 24847734 incompatibility score, and it is implemented in SplitsTree package version 4.8. Extensive simulation studies and comparison with other available methods have shown that not only the PHI test is extremely po