Understanding the impact of antiretroviral therapy (ART) duration on HIV-infected cells is critical for developing successful curative strategies. To address this issue, we conducted a cross-sectional/inter-participant genetic characterization of HIV-1 RNA from pre- and on-therapy plasmas and HIV-1 DNA from CD4 T cell subsets derived from peripheral blood (PB), lymph node (LN), and gut tissues of 26 participants after 3 to 17.8 years of ART. Our studies revealed in four acute/early participants who had paired PB and LN samples a substantial reduction in the proportion of HIV-infected cells per year on therapy within the LN. Extrapolation to all 12 acute/early participants estimated a much smaller reduction in the proportion of HIV-1-infected cells within LNs per year on therapy that was similar to that in the participants treated during chronic infection. LN-derived effector memory T (T) cells contained HIV-1 DNA that was genetically identical to viral sequences derived from pre- and on-therapy plasma samples. The proportion of identical HIV-1 DNA sequences increased within PB-derived T cells. However, the infection frequency of T cells in PB was stable, indicating that cellular proliferation that compensates for T cell loss over time contributes to HIV-1 persistence. This study suggests that ART reduces HIV-infected T cells and that clonal expansion of HIV-infected cells maintains viral persistence. Importantly, LN-derived T cells are a probable source of HIV-1 genomes capable of producing infectious HIV-1 and should be targeted by future curative strategies. HIV-1 persists as an integrated genome in CD4 memory T cells during effective therapy, and cessation of current treatments results in resumption of viral replication. To date, the impact of antiretroviral therapy duration on HIV-infected CD4 T cells and the mechanisms of viral persistence in different anatomic sites is not clearly elucidated. In the current study, we found that treatment duration was associated with a reduction in HIV-infected T cells. Our genetic analyses revealed that CD4 effector memory T (T) cells derived from the lymph node appeared to contain provirus that was genetically identical to plasma-derived virions. Moreover, we found that cellular proliferation counterbalanced the decay of HIV-infected cells throughout therapy. The contribution of cellular proliferation to viral persistence is particularly significant in T cells. Our study emphasizes the importance of HIV-1 intervention and provides new insights into the location of memory T cells infected with HIV-1 DNA, which is capable of contributing to viremia.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7000983 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01270-19 | DOI Listing |
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