Persistence of intact HIV-1 proviruses in the brain during antiretroviral therapy

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Abstract

HIV-1 reservoir cells that circulate in peripheral blood during suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART) have been well characterized, but little is known about the dissemination of HIV-1infected cells across multiple anatomical tissues, especially the CNS. Here, we performed singlegenome, near full-length HIV-1 next-generation sequencing to evaluate the proviral landscape in distinct anatomical compartments, including multiple CNS tissues, from 3 ART-treated participants at autopsy. While lymph nodes and, to a lesser extent, gastrointestinal and genitourinary tissues represented tissue hotspots for the persistence of intact proviruses, we also observed intact proviruses in CNS tissue sections, particularly in the basal ganglia. Multi-compartment dissemination of clonal intact and defective proviral sequences occurred across multiple anatomical tissues, including the CNS, and evidence for the clonal proliferation of HIV-1-infected cells was found in the basal ganglia, in the frontal lobe, in the thalamus and in periventricular white matter. Deep analysis of HIV-1 reservoirs in distinct tissues will be informative for advancing HIV-1 cure strategies.

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Sun, W., Rassadkina, Y., Gao, C., Collens, S. I., Lian, X., Solomon, I. H., … Lichterfeld, M. (2023). Persistence of intact HIV-1 proviruses in the brain during antiretroviral therapy. ELife, 12. https://doi.org/10.7554/ELIFE.89837

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