4.6 Article

SIV Evolutionary Dynamics in Cynomolgus Macaques during SIV-Mycobacterium tuberculosis Co-Infection

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14010048

Keywords

SIV; co-infection; viral evolution; Mtb; viral diversity; macaques

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [PLL-R21AI127066]

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This study evaluated viral diversity in a non-human primate model of SIV-Mtb co-infection and found changes in viral diversity and divergence over 6-9 weeks. Compartmentalization of viral diversity was observed in different tissues, with the highest diversity in thoracic lymph nodes. Viral diversity in lung granulomas was correlated with CD4+ T cell frequency and inversely correlated with CD8+ T cell frequency.
Co-infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a worldwide public health concern, leading to worse clinical outcomes caused by both pathogens. We used a non-human primate model of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-Mtb co-infection, in which latent Mtb infection was established prior to SIVmac251 infection. The evolutionary dynamics of SIV env was evaluated from samples in plasma, lymph nodes, and lungs (including granulomas) of SIV-Mtb co-infected and SIV only control animals. While the diversity of the challenge virus was low and overall viral diversity remained relatively low over 6-9 weeks, changes in viral diversity and divergence were observed, including evidence for tissue compartmentalization. Overall, viral diversity was highest in SIV-Mtb animals that did not develop clinical Mtb reactivation compared to animals with Mtb reactivation. Among lung granulomas, viral diversity was positively correlated with the frequency of CD4+ T cells and negatively correlated with the frequency of CD8+ T cells. SIV diversity was highest in the thoracic lymph nodes compared to other sites, suggesting that lymphatic drainage from the lungs in co-infected animals provides an advantageous environment for SIV replication. This is the first assessment of SIV diversity across tissue compartments during SIV-Mtb co-infection after established Mtb latency.

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