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Defining total-body AIDS-virus burden with implications for curative strategies.

Authors :
Estes, Jacob
Estes, Jacob
Kityo, Cissy
Ssali, Francis
Swainson, Louise
Makamdop, Krystelle
Del Prete, Gregory
Chipman, Jeffrey
Beilman, Gregory
Hoskuldsson, Torfi
Khoruts, Alexander
Anderson, Jodi
Deleage, Claire
Jasurda, Jacob
Schmidt, Thomas
Hafertepe, Michael
Callisto, Samuel
Pearson, Hope
Reimann, Thomas
Schuster, Jared
Schoephoerster, Jordan
Southern, Peter
Perkey, Katherine
Shang, Liang
Wietgrefe, Stephen
Fletcher, Courtney
Lifson, Jeffrey
Douek, Daniel
McCune, Joseph
Haase, Ashley
Schacker, Timothy
Deeks, Steven
Luciw, Paul
Estes, Jacob
Estes, Jacob
Kityo, Cissy
Ssali, Francis
Swainson, Louise
Makamdop, Krystelle
Del Prete, Gregory
Chipman, Jeffrey
Beilman, Gregory
Hoskuldsson, Torfi
Khoruts, Alexander
Anderson, Jodi
Deleage, Claire
Jasurda, Jacob
Schmidt, Thomas
Hafertepe, Michael
Callisto, Samuel
Pearson, Hope
Reimann, Thomas
Schuster, Jared
Schoephoerster, Jordan
Southern, Peter
Perkey, Katherine
Shang, Liang
Wietgrefe, Stephen
Fletcher, Courtney
Lifson, Jeffrey
Douek, Daniel
McCune, Joseph
Haase, Ashley
Schacker, Timothy
Deeks, Steven
Luciw, Paul
Source :
Nature Medicine; vol 23, iss 11
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In the quest for a functional cure or the eradication of HIV infection, it is necessary to know the sizes of the reservoirs from which infection rebounds after treatment interruption. Thus, we quantified SIV and HIV tissue burdens in tissues of infected nonhuman primates and lymphoid tissue (LT) biopsies from infected humans. Before antiretroviral therapy (ART), LTs contained >98% of the SIV RNA+ and DNA+ cells. With ART, the numbers of virus (v) RNA+ cells substantially decreased but remained detectable, and their persistence was associated with relatively lower drug concentrations in LT than in peripheral blood. Prolonged ART also decreased the levels of SIV- and HIV-DNA+ cells, but the estimated size of the residual tissue burden of 108 vDNA+ cells potentially containing replication-competent proviruses, along with evidence of continuing virus production in LT despite ART, indicated two important sources for rebound following treatment interruption. The large sizes of these tissue reservoirs underscore challenges in developing HIV cure strategies targeting multiple sources of virus production.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature Medicine; vol 23, iss 11
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature Medicine vol 23, iss 11
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401036470
Document Type :
Electronic Resource