High levels of genetically intact HIV in HLA-DR+ memory T cells indicates their value for reservoir studies

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Abstract

Objective:The contribution of HLA-DR+ memory CD4+T cells to the HIV reservoir during prolonged antiretroviral therapy is unclear as these cells are commonly excluded when assessing for replication-competent HIV. To address this issue, we examined the distribution of genetically intact HIV DNA within HLA-DR- and HLA-DR+ memory CD4+T cells and the RNA transcriptional profile of these cells during antiretroviral therapy.Design/methods:Full-length DNA sequencing was used to examine the HIV DNA landscape within HLA-DR+ and HLA-DR- memory CD4+T cells. RNA quantification and sequencing was used to interrogate the relationship between HLA-DR status and HIV RNA transcription.Results:HLA-DR+ CD4+T cells contained a high frequency of genetically intact HIV genomes, contributing over half of the genetically intact viral sequences to the reservoir. Expansions of genetically identical sequences were identified in all T-cell subsets, indicating that cellular proliferation maintains genetically intact and defective viral DNA during therapy. Intracellular HIV RNA levels in HLA-DR+ and HLA-DR- T cells were not statistically different by either long terminal repeat quantitative PCR quantification or single-genome RNA sequencing of the p6-RT region.Conclusion:The high proportion of intact viral DNA sequences in the proliferative HLA-DR+ subset suggests they are critical in maintaining HIV infection during effective therapy. As such, these cells should be included in any immune intervention targeting HIV during effective therapy.

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Horsburgh, B. A., Lee, E., Hiener, B., Eden, J. S., Schlub, T. E., Von Stockenstrom, S., … Palmer, S. (2020). High levels of genetically intact HIV in HLA-DR+ memory T cells indicates their value for reservoir studies. AIDS, 34(5), 659–668. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000002465

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