Single-cell epigenetic, transcriptional, and protein profiling of latent and active HIV-1 reservoir revealed that IKZF3 promotes HIV-1 persistence

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Abstract

Understanding how HIV-1-infected cells proliferate and persist is key to HIV-1 eradication, but the heterogeneity and rarity of HIV-1-infected cells hamper mechanistic interrogations. Here, we used single-cell DOGMA-seq to simultaneously capture transcription factor accessibility, transcriptome, surface proteins, HIV-1 DNA, and HIV-1 RNA in memory CD4+ T cells from six people living with HIV-1 during viremia and after suppressive antiretroviral therapy. We identified increased transcription factor accessibility in latent HIV-1-infected cells (RORC) and transcriptionally active HIV-1-infected cells (interferon regulatory transcription factor [IRF] and activator protein 1 [AP-1]). A proliferation program (IKZF3, IL21, BIRC5, and MKI67 co-expression) promoted the survival of transcriptionally active HIV-1-infected cells. Both latent and transcriptionally active HIV-1-infected cells had increased IKZF3 (Aiolos) expression. Distinct epigenetic programs drove the heterogeneous cellular states of HIV-1-infected cells: IRF:activation, Eomes:cytotoxic effector differentiation, AP-1:migration, and cell death. Our study revealed the single-cell epigenetic, transcriptional, and protein states of latent and transcriptionally active HIV-1-infected cells and cellular programs promoting HIV-1 persistence.

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Wei, Y., Davenport, T. C., Collora, J. A., Ma, H. K., Pinto-Santini, D., Lama, J., … Ho, Y. C. (2023). Single-cell epigenetic, transcriptional, and protein profiling of latent and active HIV-1 reservoir revealed that IKZF3 promotes HIV-1 persistence. Immunity, 56(11), 2584-2601.e7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2023.10.002

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