Open Access
HIV-1 Genomes Are Enriched in Memory CD4 + T-Cells with Short Half-Lives
Author(s) -
Vincent Morcilla,
Charline Bacchus-Souffan,
Katie Fisher,
Bethany A. Horsburgh,
Bonnie Hiener,
Xiao Qian Wang,
Timothy E. Schlub,
Mark Fitch,
Rebecca Hoh,
Frederick Hecht,
Jeffrey N. Martin,
Steven G. Deeks,
Marc K. Hellerstein,
Joseph M. McCune,
Peter W. Hunt,
Sarah Palmer
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mbio
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.562
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 2161-2129
pISSN - 2150-7511
DOI - 10.1128/mbio.02447-21
Subject(s) - provirus , effector , biology , genome , genetics , virology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene
ABSTRACT Future HIV-1 curative therapies require a thorough understanding of the distribution of genetically-intact HIV-1 within T-cell subsets during antiretroviral therapy (ART) and the cellular mechanisms that maintain this reservoir. Therefore, we sequenced near-full-length HIV-1 genomes and identified genetically-intact and genetically-defective genomes from resting naive, stem-cell memory, central memory, transitional memory, effector memory, and terminally-differentiated CD4 + T-cells with known cellular half-lives from 11 participants on ART. We find that a higher infection frequency with any HIV-1 genome was significantly associated with a shorter cellular half-life, such as transitional and effector memory cells. A similar enrichment of genetically-intact provirus was observed in these cells with relatively shorter half-lives. We found that effector memory and terminally-differentiated cells also had significantly higher levels of expansions of genetically-identical sequences, while only transitional and effector memory cells contained genetically-intact proviruses that were part of a cluster of identical sequences. Expansions of identical sequences were used to infer cellular proliferation from clonal expansion. Altogether, this indicates that specific cellular mechanisms such as short half-life and proliferative potential contribute to the persistence of genetically-intact HIV-1.