4.7 Article

HIV low viral load persistence under treatment: Insights from a model of cell-to-cell viral transmission

Journal

APPLIED MATHEMATICS LETTERS
Volume 94, Issue -, Pages 44-51

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aml.2019.02.019

Keywords

HIV infection model; Cell-to-cell; Drug treatment; HIV persistence

Funding

  1. NSFC, PR. China [11771374]
  2. Nanhu Scholar Program for Young Scholars of Xinyang Normal University, PR. China
  3. Hundred Talents Plan of Henan Province, PR. China
  4. Program for Science and Technology Innovation Talents in Universities of Henan Province, PR. China [17HASTIT011]
  5. National Science Foundation, USA [DMS-1758290]

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HIV infection persists despite long-term administration of antiretroviral therapy. The mechanisms underlying HIV persistence are not fully understood. Direct viral transmission from infected to uninfected cells (cell-to-cell transmission) may be one of them. During cell-to-cell transmission, multiple virions are delivered to an uninfected cell, making it possible that at least one virion can escape HIV drugs and establish infection. In this paper, we develop a mathematical model that includes cell-to-cell viral transmission to study HIV persistence. During cell to-cell transmission, it is assumed that various number of virus particles are transmitted with different probabilities and antiretroviral therapy has different effectiveness in blocking their infection. We analyze the model by deriving the basic reproduction number and investigating the stability of equilibria. Sensitivity analysis and numerical simulation show that the viral load is still sensitive to the change of the treatment effectiveness in blocking cell-free virus infection. To reduce this sensitivity, we modify the model by including density-dependent infected cell death or HIV latent infection. The model results suggest that although cell-to-cell transmission may have reduced susceptibility to HIV drugs, HIV latency represents a major reason for HIV persistence in patients on suppressive treatment. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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