Abstract

BackgroundHIV-1 integration is prone to a high rate of failure, resulting in the accumulation of unintegrated viral genomes (uDNA) in vivo and in vitro. uDNA can be transcriptionally active, and circularized uDNA genomes are biochemically stable in non-proliferating cells. Resting, non-proliferating CD4 T cells are prime targets of HIV-1 infection and latently infected resting CD4 T cells are the major barrier to HIV cure. Our prior studies demonstrated that uDNA generates infectious virions when T cell activation follows rather than precedes infection.ResultsHere, we characterize in primary resting CD4 T cells the dynamics of integrated and unintegrated virus expression, genome persistence and sensitivity to latency reversing agents. Unintegrated HIV-1 was abundant in directly infected resting CD4 T cells. Maximal gene expression from uDNA was delayed compared with integrated HIV-1 and was less toxic, resulting in uDNA enrichment over time relative to integrated proviruses. Inhibiting integration with raltegravir shunted the generation of durable latency from integrated to unintegrated genomes. Latent uDNA was activated to de novo virus production by latency reversing agents that also activated latent integrated proviruses, including PKC activators, histone deacetylase inhibitors and P-TEFb agonists. However, uDNA responses displayed a wider dynamic range, indicating differential regulation of expression relative to integrated proviruses. Similar to what has recently been demonstrated for latent integrated proviruses, one or two applications of latency reversing agents failed to activate all latent unintegrated genomes. Unlike integrated proviruses, uDNA gene expression did not down modulate expression of HLA Class I on resting CD4 T cells. uDNA did, however, efficiently prime infected cells for killing by HIV-1-specific cytotoxic T cells.ConclusionsThese studies demonstrate that contributions by unintegrated genomes to HIV-1 gene expression, virus production, latency and immune responses are inherent properties of the direct infection of resting CD4 T cells. Experimental models of HIV-1 latency employing directly infected resting CD4 T cells should calibrate the contribution of unintegrated HIV-1.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12977-015-0234-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • HIV-1 integration is prone to a high rate of failure, resulting in the accumulation of unintegrated viral genomes in vivo and in vitro. Unintegrated HIV-1 DNA (uDNA) can be transcriptionally active, and circularized uDNA genomes are biochemically stable in non-proliferating cells

  • The sequence of events which we found to induce production of infectious virions from uDNA mimics an in vivo situation where an infected resting CD4 T cell is activated following migration to lymphoid tissues, which has been proposed as a mechanism facilitating the establishment of HIV-1 infection [15,16,17]

  • We recently described a convenient and relevant model system [6] in which resting peripheral blood CD4 T cells are treated with common gamma chain cytokines such as IL-4 that render them permissive to infection without inducing cell activation, though it is known that common gamma chain cytokines induce signaling pathways such as stat5 or stat6 and increase the expression of the survival protein Bcl-2 [31, 32]

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Summary

Introduction

HIV-1 integration is prone to a high rate of failure, resulting in the accumulation of unintegrated viral genomes (uDNA) in vivo and in vitro. uDNA can be transcriptionally active, and circularized uDNA genomes are biochemically stable in non-proliferating cells. We reported that when HIV-1 infects resting T cells several days prior to T cell activation, uDNA alone generates infectious virions [6]. This stands in contrast to infection of activated T cells or cell lines, which support only transient and reduced levels of gene expression from uDNA without de novo virus production. The sequence of events which we found to induce production of infectious virions from uDNA mimics an in vivo situation where an infected resting CD4 T cell is activated following migration to lymphoid tissues, which has been proposed as a mechanism facilitating the establishment of HIV-1 infection [15,16,17]

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