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Clones of infected cells arise early in HIV-infected individuals
John M. Coffin, David W. Wells, Jennifer M. Zerbato, Joann D. Kuruc, Shuang Guo, Brian T. Luke, Joseph J. Eron, Michael Bale, Jonathan Spindler, Francesco R. Simonetti, Shawn Hill, Mary F. Kearney, Frank Maldarelli, Xiaolin Wu, John W. Mellors, Stephen H. Hughes
John M. Coffin, David W. Wells, Jennifer M. Zerbato, Joann D. Kuruc, Shuang Guo, Brian T. Luke, Joseph J. Eron, Michael Bale, Jonathan Spindler, Francesco R. Simonetti, Shawn Hill, Mary F. Kearney, Frank Maldarelli, Xiaolin Wu, John W. Mellors, Stephen H. Hughes
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Research Article AIDS/HIV

Clones of infected cells arise early in HIV-infected individuals

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Abstract

In HIV-infected individuals on long-term antiretroviral therapy (ART), more than 40% of the infected cells are in clones. Although most HIV proviruses present in individuals on long-term ART are defective, including those in clonally expanded cells, there is increasing evidence that clones carrying replication-competent proviruses are common in patients on long-term ART and form part of the HIV reservoir that makes it impossible to cure HIV infection with current ART alone. Given the importance of clonal expansion in HIV persistence, we determined how soon after HIV acquisition infected clones can grow large enough to be detected (clones larger than ca. 1 × 105 cells). We studied 12 individuals sampled in early HIV infection (Fiebig stage III–V/VI) and 5 who were chronically infected. The recently infected individuals were started on ART at or near the time of diagnosis. We isolated more than 6,500 independent integration sites from peripheral blood mononuclear cells before ART was initiated and after 0.5–18 years of suppressive ART. Some infected clones could be detected approximately 4 weeks after HIV infection and some of these clones persisted for years. The results help to explain how the reservoir is established early and persists for years.

Authors

John M. Coffin, David W. Wells, Jennifer M. Zerbato, Joann D. Kuruc, Shuang Guo, Brian T. Luke, Joseph J. Eron, Michael Bale, Jonathan Spindler, Francesco R. Simonetti, Shawn Hill, Mary F. Kearney, Frank Maldarelli, Xiaolin Wu, John W. Mellors, Stephen H. Hughes

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Figure 2

Neighbor-joining trees of P6-PR-RT single-genome sequences.

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Neighbor-joining trees of P6-PR-RT single-genome sequences.
Single provi...
Single proviral sequences were obtained from pre-ART and on-ART PBMCs collected from donors who were fully suppressed for the duration of the study (no blips and no treatment interruptions). Neighbor-joining trees were inferred using MEGA, with the consensus subtype B HIV sequence as an outgroup. Pre-ART proviral sequences are shown in open triangles and on-ART proviral sequences in closed triangles. Sequences with long branches due to G to A hypermutations, which are formed at the time of infection and found in all patients, are not shown, but the numbers of hypermutant sequences found at both time points are shown above each tree. PID, patient identifier; APD, average pairwise distance.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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