Paired quantitative and qualitative assessment of the replication-competent HIV-1 reservoir and comparison with integrated proviral DNA

Author:

Lorenzi Julio C. C.,Cohen Yehuda Z.,Cohn Lillian B.,Kreider Edward F.,Barton John P.ORCID,Learn Gerald H.ORCID,Oliveira Thiago,Lavine Christy L.,Horwitz Joshua A.,Settler Allison,Jankovic Mila,Seaman Michael S.,Chakraborty Arup K.,Hahn Beatrice H.,Caskey Marina,Nussenzweig Michel C.

Abstract

HIV-1–infected individuals harbor a latent reservoir of infected CD4+T cells that is not eradicated by antiretroviral therapy (ART). This reservoir presents the greatest barrier to an HIV-1 cure and has remained difficult to characterize, in part, because the vast majority of integrated sequences are defective and incapable of reactivation. To characterize the replication-competent reservoir, we have combined two techniques, quantitative viral outgrowth and qualitative sequence analysis of clonal outgrowth viruses. Leukapheresis samples from four fully ART-suppressed, chronically infected individuals were assayed at two time points separated by a 4- to 6-mo interval. Overall, 54% of the viruses emerging from the latent reservoir showed gp160envsequences that were identical to at least one other virus. Moreover, 43% of theenvsequences from viruses emerging from the reservoir were part of identical groups at the two time points. Groups of identical expanded sequences made up 54% of proviral DNA, and, as might be expected, the sequences of replication-competent viruses in the active reservoir showed limited overlap with integrated proviral DNA, most of which is known to represent defective viruses. Finally, there was an inverse correlation between proviral DNA clone size and the probability of reactivation, suggesting that replication-competent viruses are less likely to be found among highly expanded provirus-containing cell clones.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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