Clonally expanded HIV-1 proviruses with 5’-Leader defects can give rise to nonsuppressible residual viremia
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2023-01-05
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Citation of Original Publication
White, Jennifer A. Et al. “Clonally expanded HIV-1 proviruses with 5’-Leader defects can give rise to nonsuppressible residual viremia.” J Clin Invest. 2023. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI165245.
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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Abstract
BACKGROUND. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) halts HIV-1 replication, decreasing viremia to below the detection limit of clinical assays. However, some individuals experience persistent nonsuppressible viremia (NSV) originating from CD4⁺ T cell clones carrying infectious proviruses. Defective proviruses represent over 90% of all proviruses persisting during ART and can express viral genes, but whether they can cause NSV and complicate ART management is unknown.
METHODS. We carried an in-depth characterization of proviruses causing NSV in 4 study participants with optimal adherence and no drug resistance. We investigated the impact of the observed defects on 5’-Leader RNA properties, virus infectivity, and gene expression. Integration-site specific assays were used to track these proviruses over time and among cell subsets.
RESULTS. Clones carrying proviruses with 5’-Leader defects can cause persistent NSV up to ~10³ copies/mL. These proviruses had small, often identical deletions or point mutations involving the major splicing donor site (MSD) and showed partially reduced RNA dimerization and nucleocapsid binding. Nevertheless, they were inducible and produced non-infectious virions containing viral RNA but lacking Envelope.
CONCLUSION. These findings show that proviruses with 5’-Leader defects in CD4⁺ T cell clones can give rise to NSV, affecting clinical care. Sequencing of the 5’-Leader can help understanding failure to completely suppress viremia.
FUNDING. Office of the NIH Director and National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research, NIH; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Johns Hopkins University Center for AIDS Research; National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, to the PAVE, BEAT-HIV and DARE Martin Delaney collaboratories.