Droplet-microfluidics-assisted sequencing of HIV proviruses and their integration sites in cells from people on antiretroviral therapy.
Chen SunLeqian LiuLiliana PérezXiangpeng LiYifan LiuPeng XuEli A BoritzJames I MullinsAdam R AbatePublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2022)
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) integrates its genome into that of infected cells and may enter an inactive state of reversible latency that cannot be targeted using antiretroviral therapy. Sequencing such a provirus and the adjacent host junctions in individual cells may elucidate the mechanisms of the persistence of infected cells, but this is difficult owing to the 150-million-fold higher amount of background human DNA. Here we show that full-length proviruses connected to their contiguous HIV-host DNA junctions can be assembled via a high-throughput microfluidic assay where droplet-based whole-genome amplification of HIV DNA in its native context is followed by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to tag droplets containing proviruses for sequencing. We assayed infected cells from people with HIV receiving suppressive antiretroviral therapy, resulting in the detection and sequencing of paired proviral genomes and integration sites, 90% of which were not recovered by commonly used nested-PCR methods. The sequencing of individual proviral genomes with their integration sites could improve the genetic analysis of persistent HIV-infected cell reservoirs.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- single cell
- hiv positive
- high throughput
- hiv infected patients
- hiv aids
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- cell cycle arrest
- cell free
- circulating tumor
- hepatitis c virus
- endothelial cells
- cell death
- genome wide
- cell therapy
- cell proliferation
- hiv testing
- oxidative stress
- nucleic acid
- stem cells
- bone marrow
- quantum dots
- dna methylation
- circulating tumor cells
- drug delivery
- loop mediated isothermal amplification