Abstract

BackgroundA reservoir of replication-competent but latent virus is the main obstacle to a cure for HIV-1 infection. Much of this reservoir resides in memory CD4 T cells. We hypothesized that these cells can be reactivated with antigens from HIV-1 and other common pathogens to reverse latency.ResultsWe obtained mononuclear cells from the peripheral blood of antiretroviral-treated patients with suppressed viremia. We tested pools of peptides and proteins derived from HIV-1 and from other pathogens including CMV for their ability to reverse latency ex vivo by activation of memory responses. We assessed activation of the CD4 T cells by measuring the up-regulation of cell-surface CD69. We assessed HIV-1 expression using two assays: a real-time PCR assay for virion-associated viral RNA and a droplet digital PCR assay for cell-associated, multiply spliced viral mRNA. Reversal of latency occurred in a minority of cells from some participants, but no single antigen induced HIV-1 expression ex vivo consistently. When reversal of latency was induced by a specific peptide pool or protein, the extent was proportionally greater than that of T cell activation.ConclusionsIn this group of patients in whom antiretroviral therapy was started during chronic infection, the latent reservoir does not appear to consistently reside in CD4 T cells of a predominant antigen-specificity. Peptide-antigens reversed HIV-1 latency ex vivo with modest and variable activity. When latency was reversed by specific peptides or proteins, it was proportionally greater than the extent of T cell activation, suggesting partial enrichment of the latent reservoir in cells of specific antigen-reactivity.

Highlights

  • A reservoir of replication-competent but latent virus is the main obstacle to a cure for human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection

  • We found that in some cases antigenic peptides or proteins reversed latency, but they rarely did so to a substantial extent, and no particular antigen was active in all cases

  • When peptides or protein antigens reversed latency, they did so to an extent greater than would be predicted based on their induction of T cell-activation. This suggests that in occasional individuals the latent reservoir is disproportionally present in cells of specific antigen-reactivity, a finding potentially consistent with clonal expansion of specific memory CD4 T cells

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Summary

Introduction

A reservoir of replication-competent but latent virus is the main obstacle to a cure for HIV-1 infection. Much of this reservoir resides in memory CD4 T cells. We hypothesized that these cells can be reactivated with antigens from HIV-1 and other common pathogens to reverse latency. HIV-1 causes immune activation, preferentially infecting activated HIV-1 specific CD4 T cells [9]. This suggests the possibility that the viral reservoir is biased toward such HIV-specific memory cells.

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