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HIV silencing and cell survival signatures in infected T cell reservoirs.

Iain C ClarkPrakriti MudvariShravan ThaplooSamuel SmithMohammad Abu-LabanMehdi HamoudaMarc W ThebergeSakshi ShahSung Hee KoLiliana PérezDaniel G BunisJames S LeeDivya KilamSaami ZakariaSally ChoiSamuel DarkoAmy R HenryMichael A WheelerRebecca HohSalwan ButrusSteven G DeeksFrancisco J QuintanaDaniel C DouekAdam R AbateEli A Boritz
Published in: Nature (2023)
Rare CD4 T cells that contain HIV under antiretroviral therapy represent an important barrier to HIV cure 1-3 , but the infeasibility of isolating and characterizing these cells in their natural state has led to uncertainty about whether they possess distinctive attributes that HIV cure-directed therapies might exploit. Here we address this challenge using a microfluidic technology that isolates the transcriptomes of HIV-infected cells based solely on the detection of HIV DNA. HIV-DNA + memory CD4 T cells in the blood from people receiving antiretroviral therapy showed inhibition of six transcriptomic pathways, including death receptor signalling, necroptosis signalling and antiproliferative Gα12/13 signalling. Moreover, two groups of genes identified by network co-expression analysis were significantly associated with HIV-DNA + cells. These genes (n = 145) accounted for just 0.81% of the measured transcriptome and included negative regulators of HIV transcription that were higher in HIV-DNA + cells, positive regulators of HIV transcription that were lower in HIV-DNA + cells, and other genes involved in RNA processing, negative regulation of mRNA translation, and regulation of cell state and fate. These findings reveal that HIV-infected memory CD4 T cells under antiretroviral therapy are a distinctive population with host gene expression patterns that favour HIV silencing, cell survival and cell proliferation, with important implications for the development of HIV cure strategies.
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