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Intact HIV-1 proviruses accumulate at distinct chromosomal positions during prolonged antiretroviral therapy

Authors :
Mathias Lichterfeld
Kevin Einkauf
Xu G. Yu
Jonathan Z. Li
Fatema Z. Chowdhury
Guinevere Q. Lee
Xiaoming Sun
Stephane Hua
Ce Gao
Xiao-Dong Lian
Tae-Wook Chun
Samantha M.Y. Chen
Eric S. Rosenberg
Radwa Sharaf
Chenyang Jiang
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 129:988-998
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2019.

Abstract

Chromosomal integration of genome-intact HIV-1 sequences into the host genome creates a reservoir of virally infected cells that persists throughout life, necessitating indefinite antiretroviral suppression therapy. During effective antiviral treatment, the majority of these proviruses remain transcriptionally silent, but mechanisms responsible for viral latency are insufficiently clear. Here, we used matched integration site and proviral sequencing (MIP-Seq), an experimental approach involving multiple displacement amplification of individual proviral species, followed by near-full-length HIV-1 next-generation sequencing and corresponding chromosomal integration site analysis to selectively map the chromosomal positions of intact and defective proviruses in 3 HIV-1–infected individuals undergoing long-term antiretroviral therapy. Simultaneously, chromatin accessibility and gene expression in autologous CD4(+) T cells were analyzed by assays for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-Seq) and RNA-Seq. We observed that in comparison to proviruses with defective sequences, intact HIV-1 proviruses were enriched for non-genic chromosomal positions and more frequently showed an opposite orientation relative to host genes. In addition, intact HIV-1 proviruses were preferentially integrated in either relative proximity to or increased distance from active transcriptional start sites and to accessible chromatin regions. These studies strongly suggest selection of intact proviruses with features of deeper viral latency during prolonged antiretroviral therapy, and may be informative for targeting the genome-intact viral reservoir.

Details

ISSN :
15588238 and 00219738
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2eacdfa577f07bd7919bd171f7b54e97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci124291