Abstract
The different pathways of HIV transmission from dendritic cells to T cells and their possible capacity to harbor the virus, indicates the potential of this group of cells to be a viral reservoir, allowing the virus to evade immune responses. Therefore, we isolated in vivo blood dendritic cells (DCs) from HIV-1 infected patients undergoing HAART. Proviral DNA amplification from DCs was obtained from all infected patients except in patients with non-detectable viral loads. A significant finding was that DCs proviral DNA amplification were obtained from three patients with extremely low viral loads, which resembles the normal viral blips in HAART suppression. This DCs viral infection may be responsible for the replenishment of important reservoirs. DCs' capacity to harbor archaic viral quasispecies was also revealed in two of six patients and those quasispecies were at least as archaic as resting CD4+ T cells viral quasispecies. In addition, the DCs proviral DNA of these two patients presented multiple changes in glycosylation patterns equal to resting CD4+ T cells reservoir. Other important analyses of nucleotide distance and phylogeny revealed a close relation between the viral populations of DCs and resting CD4+ T cells in four HAART failure patients. These data suggest that DCs can act as a short-term reservoir and could be partially responsible for the replenishment of other important reservoirs. Due to the well-documented capacity of DCs to pass the HIV infection to T cells and phylogenetic evidence, we suggest that the infection of DCs in HAART suppression may be partially responsible for the replenishment of the resting CD4+ T cell reservoir.
Highlights
C Colón1, Juan C López1, Jesús Rosado1, Carlos Domínguez5, René Herrera4, Martin Hill2, Alberto S Cornier3 and Eric Lorenzo1
We isolated in vivo blood dendritic cells (DCs) from HIV-1 infected patients undergoing HAART
Proviral DNA amplification from DCs was obtained from all infected patients except in patients with non-detectable viral loads
Summary
C Colón1, Juan C López1, Jesús Rosado1, Carlos Domínguez5, René Herrera4, Martin Hill2, Alberto S Cornier3 and Eric Lorenzo1. HIV-1 infection in dendritic cells in HAART suppressed patients lrvin M Maldonado*1, Sharilyn Almodóvar1, Giselle Marrero1, María del Address: 1Molecular Virology Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry, Ponce School of Medicine, Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2Department of Pharmacology, Ponce School of Medicine, Ponce, Puerto Rico, 3Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Department of Genetics, San Juan Bautista School of Medicine, Caguas, Puerto Rico, 4Molecular Biology and Human Diversity Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, Miami, Florida, USA and 5Clínica Especial de Salud, Juana Díaz, Puerto Rico
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