Sorry, I don't understand your search. ×
Back to Search Start Over

HIV-1 Integration Landscape during Latent and Active Infection

Authors :
Cohn, Lillian B.
Silva, Israel T.
Oliveira, Thiago Y.
Rosales, Rafael A.
Parrish, Erica H.
Learn, Gerald H.
Hahn, Beatrice H.
Czartoski, Julie L.
McElrath, M. Juliana
Lehmann, Clara
Klein, Florian
Caskey, Marina
Walker, Bruce D.
Siliciano, Janet D.
Siliciano, Robert F.
Jankovic, Mila
Nussenzweig, Michel C.
Cohn, Lillian B.
Silva, Israel T.
Oliveira, Thiago Y.
Rosales, Rafael A.
Parrish, Erica H.
Learn, Gerald H.
Hahn, Beatrice H.
Czartoski, Julie L.
McElrath, M. Juliana
Lehmann, Clara
Klein, Florian
Caskey, Marina
Walker, Bruce D.
Siliciano, Janet D.
Siliciano, Robert F.
Jankovic, Mila
Nussenzweig, Michel C.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The barrier to curing HIV-1 is thought to reside primarily in CD4(+) T cells containing silent proviruses. To characterize these latently infected cells, we studied the integration profile of HIV-1 in viremic progressors, individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy, and viremic controllers. Clonally expanded T cells represented the majority of all integrations and increased during therapy. However, none of the 75 expanded T cell clones assayed contained intact virus. In contrast, the cells bearing single integration events decreased in frequency over time on therapy, and the surviving cells were enriched for HIV-1 integration in silent regions of the genome. Finally, there was a strong preference for integration into, or in close proximity to, Alu repeats, which were also enriched in local hotspots for integration. The data indicate that dividing clonally expanded T cells contain defective proviruses and that the replication-competent reservoir is primarily found in CD4(+) T cells that remain relatively quiescent.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1247373085
Document Type :
Electronic Resource