Myeloid Dendritic Cells Induce HIV-1 Latency in Non-proliferating CD4+ T Cells

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Abstract

Latently infected resting CD4+ T cells are a major barrier to HIV cure. Understanding how latency is established, maintained and reversed is critical to identifying novel strategies to eliminate latently infected cells. We demonstrate here that co-culture of resting CD4+ T cells and syngeneic myeloid dendritic cells (mDC) can dramatically increase the frequency of HIV DNA integration and latent HIV infection in non-proliferating memory, but not naïve, CD4+ T cells. Latency was eliminated when cell-to-cell contact was prevented in the mDC-T cell co-cultures and reduced when clustering was minimised in the mDC-T cell co-cultures. Supernatants from infected mDC-T cell co-cultures did not facilitate the establishment of latency, consistent with cell-cell contact and not a soluble factor being critical for mediating latent infection of resting CD4+ T cells. Gene expression in non-proliferating CD4+ T cells, enriched for latent infection, showed significant changes in the expression of genes involved in cellular activation and interferon regulated pathways, including the down-regulation of genes controlling both NF-κB and cell cycle. We conclude that mDC play a key role in the establishment of HIV latency in resting memory CD4+ T cells, which is predominantly mediated through signalling during DC-T cell contact. © 2013 Evans et al.

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Evans, V. A., Kumar, N., Filali, A., Procopio, F. A., Yegorov, O., Goulet, J. P., … Lewin, S. R. (2013). Myeloid Dendritic Cells Induce HIV-1 Latency in Non-proliferating CD4+ T Cells. PLoS Pathogens, 9(12), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003799

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