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HIV viral transcription and immune perturbations in the CNS of people with HIV despite ART
Shelli F. Farhadian, … , Yuval Kluger, Serena Spudich
Shelli F. Farhadian, … , Yuval Kluger, Serena Spudich
Published July 8, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(13):e160267. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.160267.
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Research Article AIDS/HIV Neuroscience

HIV viral transcription and immune perturbations in the CNS of people with HIV despite ART

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Abstract

People with HIV (PWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART) experience elevated rates of neurological impairment, despite controlling for demographic factors and comorbidities, suggesting viral or neuroimmune etiologies for these deficits. Here, we apply multimodal and cross-compartmental single-cell analyses of paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and peripheral blood in PWH and uninfected controls. We demonstrate that a subset of central memory CD4+ T cells in the CSF produced HIV-1 RNA, despite apparent systemic viral suppression, and that HIV-1–infected cells were more frequently found in the CSF than in the blood. Using cellular indexing of transcriptomes and epitopes by sequencing (CITE-seq), we show that the cell surface marker CD204 is a reliable marker for rare microglia-like cells in the CSF, which have been implicated in HIV neuropathogenesis, but which we did not find to contain HIV transcripts. Through a feature selection method for supervised deep learning of single-cell transcriptomes, we find that abnormal CD8+ T cell activation, rather than CD4+ T cell abnormalities, predominated in the CSF of PWH compared with controls. Overall, these findings suggest ongoing CNS viral persistence and compartmentalized CNS neuroimmune effects of HIV infection during ART and demonstrate the power of single-cell studies of CSF to better understand the CNS reservoir during HIV infection.

Authors

Shelli F. Farhadian, Ofir Lindenbaum, Jun Zhao, Michael J. Corley, Yunju Im, Hannah Walsh, Alyssa Vecchio, Rolando Garcia-Milian, Jennifer Chiarella, Michelle Chintanaphol, Rachela Calvi, Guilin Wang, Lishomwa C. Ndhlovu, Jennifer Yoon, Diane Trotta, Shuangge Ma, Yuval Kluger, Serena Spudich

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Figure 3

Differential abundance analysis of CSF T cells.

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Differential abundance analysis of CSF T cells.
(A) Left, UMAP projectio...
(A) Left, UMAP projection of CSF T cells from PWH (blue) and uninfected controls (CTRL; red). Right, cells are colored if they belong to a region that is DA in PWH compared with CTRL. Identities 1 and 2 are DA regions that were found more frequently in PWH, and identity 3 is the DA region that was found less frequently in PWH compared with uninfected controls. Cells colored gray are not in DA regions. (B) Violin plot showing expression of genes that distinguish the DA regions from all other T cells. (C) Dot plot showing average expression of DA T cell marker genes in the CSF T cells of PWH compared with uninfected controls. The size of the dot corresponds to the percentage of cells expressing the gene. The color represents the average expression level. n = 5 PWH and n = 4 uninfected controls.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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