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Persistence of an intact HIV reservoir in phenotypically naive T cells
Emmanuele Venanzi Rullo, Marilia Rita Pinzone, LaMont Cannon, Sam Weissman, Manuela Ceccarelli, Ryan Zurakowski, Giuseppe Nunnari, Una O’Doherty
Emmanuele Venanzi Rullo, Marilia Rita Pinzone, LaMont Cannon, Sam Weissman, Manuela Ceccarelli, Ryan Zurakowski, Giuseppe Nunnari, Una O’Doherty
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Research Article AIDS/HIV

Persistence of an intact HIV reservoir in phenotypically naive T cells

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Abstract

Despite the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy (ART), HIV persists in a latent form and remains a hurdle to eradication. CD4+ T lymphocytes harbor the majority of the HIV reservoir, but the role of individual subsets remains unclear. CD4+ T cells were sorted into central, transitional, effector memory, and naive T cells. We measured HIV DNA and performed proviral sequencing of more than 1900 proviruses in 2 subjects at 2 and 9 years after ART initiation to estimate the contribution of each subset to the reservoir. Although our study was limited to 2 subjects, we obtained comparable findings with publicly available sequences. While the HIV integration levels were lower in naive compared with memory T cells, naive cells were a major contributor to the intact proviral reservoir. Notably, proviral sequences isolated from naive cells appeared to be unique, while those retrieved from effector memory cells were mainly clonal. The number of clones increased as cells differentiated from a naive to an effector memory phenotype, suggesting naive cells repopulate the effector memory reservoir as previously shown for central memory cells. Naive T cells contribute substantially to the intact HIV reservoir and represent a significant hurdle for HIV eradication.

Authors

Emmanuele Venanzi Rullo, Marilia Rita Pinzone, LaMont Cannon, Sam Weissman, Manuela Ceccarelli, Ryan Zurakowski, Giuseppe Nunnari, Una O’Doherty

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Figure 6

Analysis of coreceptor tropism using Geno2Pheno (G2P) suggests that TN cells might harbor CCR5-tropic HIV.

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Analysis of coreceptor tropism using Geno2Pheno (G2P) suggests that TN c...
We used G2P to study coreceptor tropism of proviral sequences retrieved from different subsets. We included all the evaluable env sequences. (A and B) We used G2P with a 10% FPR, where the FPR indicates the likelihood to misclassify a provirus as CXCR4-tropic (which is based on phenotypic assays). When using G2P FPR 10%, both subjects showed a predominance of CXCR4-tropic sequences. (C and D) We used G2P with a 2.5% FPR. With G2P FPR 2.5%, most evaluable env ORFs were predicted to be CCR5-tropic for Subject 1 at both time points (C), while Subject 2 had, on average, 30% CXCR4-tropic sequences across subsets (D). Interestingly, with either 10% or 2.5% FPR, TN cells were predicted to contain CCR5-tropic sequences in both individuals.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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