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The latent reservoir of inducible, infectious HIV-1 does not decrease despite decades of antiretroviral therapy

Authors :
Natalie F. McMyn
Joseph Varriale
Emily J. Fray
Carolin Zitzmann
Hannah MacLeod
Jun Lai
Anushka Singhal
Milica Moskovljevic
Mauro A. Garcia
Brianna M. Lopez
Vivek Hariharan
Kyle Rhodehouse
Kenneth Lynn
Pablo Tebas
Karam Mounzer
Luis J. Montaner
Erika Benko
Colin Kovacs
Rebecca Hoh
Francesco R. Simonetti
Gregory M. Laird
Steven G. Deeks
Ruy M. Ribeiro
Alan S. Perelson
Robert F. Siliciano
Janet M. Siliciano
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol 133, Iss 17 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2023.

Abstract

HIV-1 persists in a latent reservoir in resting CD4+ T cells despite antiretroviral therapy (ART). The reservoir decays slowly over the first 7 years of ART (t1/2 = 44 months). However, whether decay continues with long-term ART is unclear. Recent integration site studies indicate gradual selection against inducible, intact proviruses, raising speculation that decades of ART might allow treatment interruption without viral rebound. Therefore, we measured the reservoir in 42 people on long-term ART (mean 22 years) using a quantitative viral outgrowth assay. After 7 years of ART, there was no long-term decrease in the frequency of inducible, replication-competent proviruses but rather an increase with an estimated doubling time of 23 years. Another reservoir assay, the intact proviral DNA assay, confirmed that reservoir decay with t1/2 of 44 months did not continue with long-term ART. The lack of decay reflected proliferation of infected cells. Most inducible, replication-competent viruses (79.8%) had env sequences identical to those of other isolates from the same sample. Thus, although integration site analysis indicates changes in reservoir composition, the proliferation of CD4+ T cells counteracts decay, maintaining the frequency of inducible, replication-competent proviruses at roughly constant levels over the long term. These results reinforce the need for lifelong ART.

Subjects

Subjects :
AIDS/HIV
Virology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
133
Issue :
17
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.16cb14484f3b4a688aeb5fd64cf309ef
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI171554