4.5 Article

The role of cell-to-cell transmission in HIV infection: insights from a mathematical modeling approach

Journal

MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES AND ENGINEERING
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages 12093-12117

Publisher

AMER INST MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES-AIMS
DOI: 10.3934/mbe.2023538

Keywords

HIV; multiple infection; mathematical models; cell-to-cell spread

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HIV infection is a serious global public health problem, and the persistence of the virus despite long-term therapy can be explained by multiple infections and cell-to-cell spread. Mathematical modeling reveals that cell-to-cell spread plays a crucial role in the development of HIV multi-infection and low HIV persistence, shedding light on HIV pathogenesis and treatment strategies.
HIV infection remains a serious global public health problem. Although current drug treat-ment is effective and can reduce plasma viral loads below the level of detection, it cannot eradicate the virus. The reasons for the low virus persistence despite long-term therapy have not been fully eluci-dated. In addition, multiple HIV infection, i.e., infection of a cell by multiple viruses, is common and can facilitate viral recombination and mutations, evading the immune system and conferring resistance to drug treatment. The mechanisms for multiple HIV infection formation and their respective contri-butions remain unclear. To answer these questions, we developed a mathematical modeling framework that encompasses cell-free viral infection and cell-to-cell spread. We fit sub-models that only have one transmission route and the full model containing both to the multi-infection data from HIV-infected pa-tients, and show that the multi-infection data can only be reproduced if these two transmission routes are both considered. Computer simulations with the best-fitting parameter values indicate that cell -to-cell spread leads to the majority of multiple infection and also accounts for the majority of overall infection. Sensitivity analysis shows that cell-to-cell spread has reduced susceptibility to treatment and may explain low HIV persistence. Taken together, this work indicates that cell-to-cell spread plays a crucial role in the development of HIV multi-infection and low HIV persistence despite long-term therapy, and therefore has important implications for understanding HIV pathogenesis and developing more effective treatment strategies to control or even eliminate the disease.

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