4.3 Article

Single-cell analysis of immune cell transcriptome during HIV-1 infection and therapy

Journal

BMC IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12865-022-00523-2

Keywords

HIV-1; Single-cell RNA-seq; HIV-1 infection; Immune cells

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH NIAID
  2. Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology and Immunogen Discovery (CHAVI-ID) [UM1-AI100645]
  3. Duke Consortia for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Development (CHAVD) [UM1-AI031308]
  4. NIH NIAID [R01-AI147778]

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This study used single-cell transcriptome sequencing to investigate transcriptional changes in immune cells during HIV-1 infection and antiretroviral therapy (ART). The results showed that key molecular pathways remain altered in immune cells during chronic HIV-1 infection despite therapy. Additionally, the study identified key genes that are upregulated during early HIV-1 infection, providing potential targets for future therapies.
Background Cellular immune responses are phenotypically and functionally perturbed during HIV-1 infection, with the majority of function restored upon antiretroviral therapy (ART). Despite ART, residual inflammation remains that can lead to HIV-related co-morbidities and mortality, indicating that ART does not fully restore normal immune cell function. Thus, understanding the dynamics of the immune cell landscape during HIV-1 infection and ART is critical to defining cellular dysfunction that occurs during HIV-1 infection and imprints during therapy. Results Here, we have applied single-cell transcriptome sequencing of peripheral blood immune cells from chronic untreated HIV-1 individuals, HIV-1-infected individuals receiving ART and HIV-1 negative individuals. We also applied single-cell transcriptome sequencing to a primary cell model of early HIV-1 infection using CD4+ T cells from healthy donors. We described changes in the transcriptome at high resolution that occurred during HIV-1 infection, and perturbations that remained during ART. We also determined transcriptional differences among T cells expressing HIV-1 transcripts that identified key regulators of HIV-1 infection that may serve as targets for future therapies to block HIV-1 infection. Conclusions This work identified key molecular pathways that are altered in immune cells during chronic HIV-1 infection that could remain despite therapy. We also identified key genes that are upregulated during early HIV-1 infection that provide insights on the mechanism of HIV-1 infection and could be targets for future therapy.

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