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Clonal Expansion of Infected CD4+T Cells in People Living with HIV

期刊

VIRUSES-BASEL
卷 13, 期 10, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13102078

关键词

HIV latency; HIV reservoir; HIV cure; persistent viremia

类别

资金

  1. NCI [R35 CA 200,421]
  2. Leidos Subcontract [l3XS110]
  3. National Cancer Institute

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HIV infection forms a latent reservoir during ART treatment, with most cells being large clones rather than the traditional resting cells. These expanding or destined-to-expand cells are primarily antigen-driven, with a majority carrying defective proviruses but some carrying intact infectious proviruses. While most proviruses remain transcriptionally silent, a small fraction can produce low levels of infectious virus.
HIV infection is not curable with current antiretroviral therapy (ART) because a small fraction of CD4+ T cells infected prior to ART initiation persists. Understanding the nature of this latent reservoir and how it is created is essential to development of potentially curative strategies. The discovery that a large fraction of the persistently infected cells in individuals on suppressive ART are members of large clones greatly changed our view of the reservoir and how it arises. Rather than being the products of infection of resting cells, as was once thought, HIV persistence is largely or entirely a consequence of infection of cells that are either expanding or are destined to expand, primarily due to antigen-driven activation. Although most of the clones carry defective proviruses, some carry intact infectious proviruses; these clones comprise the majority of the reservoir. A large majority of both the defective and the intact infectious proviruses in clones of infected cells are transcriptionally silent; however, a small fraction expresses a few copies of unspliced HIV RNA. A much smaller fraction is responsible for production of low levels of infectious virus, which can rekindle infection when ART is stopped. Further understanding of the reservoir will be needed to clarify the mechanism(s) by which provirus expression is controlled in the clones of cells that constitute the reservoir.

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