Abstract

HIV infection can be cleared with antiretroviral drugs if they are administered before exposure, where exposure occurs at low viral doses which infect one or few cells. However, infection clearance does not happen once infection is established, and this may be because of the very early formation of a reservoir of latently infected cells. Here we investigated whether initial low dose infection could be cleared with sub-optimal drug inhibition which allows ongoing viral replication, and hence does not require latency for viral persistence. We derived a model for infection clearance with inputs being drug effects on ongoing viral replication and initial number of infected cells. We experimentally tested the model by inhibiting low dose infection with the drug tenofovir, which interferes with initial infection, and atazanavir, which reduces the cellular virion burst size and hence inhibits replication only after initial infection. Drugs were used at concentrations which allowed infection to expand. Under these conditions, tenofovir dramatically increased clearance while atazanavir did not. Addition of latency to the model resulted in a minor decrease in clearance probability if the drug inhibited initial infection. If not, latency strongly decreased clearance even at low latent cell frequencies. Therefore, the ability of drugs to clear initial but not established infection can be recapitulated without latency and depends only on the ability to target initial infection. The presence of latency can dramatically decrease infection clearance, but only if the drug is unable to interfere with infection of the first cells.

Highlights

  • HIV can be suppressed with antiretroviral therapy (ART) to clinically undetectable levels in the blood

  • We investigated why initial HIV infection can be cleared with inhibitors before it is established but not after

  • We examined two drug mechanisms: inhibition of infection frequency, and reduction of the burst size of viable virions from an already infected cell

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Summary

Introduction

HIV can be suppressed with antiretroviral therapy (ART) to clinically undetectable levels in the blood. Established HIV infection cannot be cleared with ART, and generally rebounds several week after ART interruption. There is extensive evidence that a key component of the HIV reservoir is a population of latently infected cells: cells where functional proviral HIV DNA is integrated into the cellular genome but is not expressed [3,4,5,6]. Such cells may start producing virus when they are activated [7, 8] and due to stochastic fluctuations in HIV Tat protein production, initiating a positive feedback loop in HIV gene expression [9, 10]. The majority of clinical studies have shown that PrEP is effective in a variety of populations, transmission modes, and drug delivery modalities [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19]

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