1. HIV-1 viral blips are associated with repeated and increasingly high levels of cell-associated HIV-1 RNA transcriptional activity
- Author
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Mitchell Starr, Raffaella Williams, Julie Yeung, Angelique Levert, Velma Oswald, Jane Cameron, Nikolas Rismanto, Zhixin Liu, Leon Patrick McNally, Dylan Druery, Imelda Hanafi, Cristina Ferrarini, Philip Cunningham, Tayla Stark, Kazuo Suzuki, John Zaunders, Louise Evans, Takaomi Ishida, Chin-Shiou Huang, Salzeena Prasad, Bruce J. Brew, and Geoffrey Symonds
- Subjects
T cell ,Immunology ,Cell ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,HIV reservoir ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Basic Science ,Proviruses ,Transcription (biology) ,HIV-1 transcriptional activity ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,blip episode ,RNA ,CD28 ,Viral Load ,Virology ,In vitro ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,HIV-1 ,RNA, Viral ,activation of CD4+ T cells ,DNA - Abstract
Objective Some HIV+ patients, virally suppressed on ART, show occasional "blips" of detectable HIV-1 plasma RNA. We used a new highly sensitive assay of cell-associated HIV-1 RNA to measure transcriptional activity in PBMCs and production of infectious virus from the viral reservoir, in patients with and without "blips". Design/methods RNA and DNA extracted from cells in 6 mls of peripheral blood, from suppressed patients with one to two "blip" episodes over the past 2 years of ART (n = 55), or no "blips" (n = 52), were assayed for HIV-1 RNA transcripts and proviral DNA targeting the highly conserved "R" region of the LTR. Follow-up samples were also collected. Purified CD4+ T cells were cultured with anti-CD3/CD28/CD2 T cell activator to amplify transcription and measure replication competent virus. Results HIV-1 RNA transcripts ranged from 1.3 to 5,415 copies/106 white blood cells. "Blip" patients had significantly higher levels vs without blips (median 192 vs 49; p = 0.0007), which correlated with: higher levels of inducible transcripts after activation in vitro, sustained higher HIV-1 transcription levels in follow-up samples along with increasing HIV-1 DNA in some, and production of replication competent HIV-1. Conclusion Viral "blips" are significant reflecting higher transcriptional activity from the reservoir and contribute to the reservoir over time. This sensitive assay can be used in monitoring the size and activity of the HIV-1 reservoir and will be useful in HIV-1 cure strategies.
- Published
- 2021