Abstract

Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) can reduce levels of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to undetectable levels in infected individuals, but the virus is not eradicated. The mechanisms of viral persistence during HAART are poorly defined, but some reservoirs have been identified, such as latently infected resting memory CD4+ T cells. During latency, in addition to blocks at the initiation and elongation steps of viral transcription, there is a block in the export of viral RNA (vRNA), leading to the accumulation of multiply-spliced transcripts in the nucleus. Two of the genes encoded by the multiply-spliced transcripts are Tat and Rev, which are essential early in the viral replication cycle and might indicate the state of infection in a given population of cells. Here, the levels of multiply-spliced transcripts were compared to the levels of gag-containing RNA in tissue samples from RT-SHIV-infected rhesus macaques treated with HAART. Splice site sequence variation was identified during development of a TaqMan PCR assay. Multiply-spliced transcripts were detected in gastrointestinal and lymphatic tissues, but not the thymus. Levels of multiply-spliced transcripts were lower than levels of gag RNA, and both correlated with plasma virus loads. The ratio of multiply-spliced to gag RNA was greatest in the gastrointestinal samples from macaques with plasma virus loads <50 vRNA copies per mL at necropsy. Levels of gag RNA and multiply-spliced mRNA in tissues from RT-SHIV-infected macaques correlate with plasma virus load.

Highlights

  • Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) persists in infected persons despite advancements in treatment

  • While it is apparent that highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) does not eradicate HIV-1 infection, reservoirs allowing for viral persistence during treatment are poorly understood

  • To help elucidate the mechanisms of viral persistence, we compared the distribution of viral multiply spliced viral mRNA (MS mRNA) and gag RNA in tissues from reverse transcriptase (RT)-SHIV-infected macaques treated with HAART

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Summary

Introduction

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) persists in infected persons despite advancements in treatment. In purified resting memory CD4+ T cell populations from HAART-treated people an abundance of MS viral mRNAs have been detected despite an absence of cellular activation [35,36]. This suggests that blocks at the transcriptional initiation and elongation steps are not absolute and that some transcription occurs, even in latently infected cells [35,36]. We addressed the possibility that MS transcripts might serve as indicators of viral persistence in tissues from RT-SHIV-infected macaques during HAART.

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