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Viral and host mediators of non-suppressible HIV-1 viremia.

Abbas MohammadiBehzad EtemadXin ZhangYijia LiGregory J BedwellRadwa SharafAutumn KittilsonMeghan MelbergCharles R CrainAnna K TraunbauerColline WongJesse FajnzylberDaniel P WorrallAlex RosenthalHannah JordanNikolaus JilgClarety KasekeFrancoise GiguelXiaodong LianRinki DeoElisabeth GillespieRida ChishtiSara AbrhaTaylor AdamsAbigail SiagianDominic DorazioPeter L AndersonSteven G DeeksMichael M LedermanSigal YawetzDaniel R KuritzkesMathias D LichterfeldScott F SiegAthe TsibrisMary N CarringtonZabrina L BrummeJose R Castillo-MancillaAlan N EngelmanGaurav D GaihaJonathan Z Li
Published in: Nature medicine (2023)
Non-suppressible HIV-1 viremia (NSV) is defined as persistent low-level viremia on antiretroviral therapy (ART) without evidence of ART non-adherence or significant drug resistance. Unraveling the mechanisms behind NSV would broaden our understanding of HIV-1 persistence. Here we analyzed plasma virus sequences in eight ART-treated individuals with NSV (88% male) and show that they are composed of large clones without evidence of viral evolution over time in those with longitudinal samples. We defined proviruses that match plasma HIV-1 RNA sequences as 'producer proviruses', and those that did not as 'non-producer proviruses'. Non-suppressible viremia arose from expanded clones of producer proviruses that were significantly larger than the genome-intact proviral reservoir of ART-suppressed individuals. Integration sites of producer proviruses were enriched in proximity to the activating H3K36me3 epigenetic mark. CD4 + T cells from participants with NSV demonstrated upregulation of anti-apoptotic genes and downregulation of pro-apoptotic and type I/II interferon-related pathways. Furthermore, participants with NSV showed significantly lower HIV-specific CD8 + T cell responses compared with untreated viremic controllers with similar viral loads. We identified potential critical host and viral mediators of NSV that may represent targets to disrupt HIV-1 persistence.
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