Abstract

BackgroundVirus-associated cell membrane proteins acquired by HIV-1 during budding may give information on the cellular source of circulating virions. In the present study, by applying immunosorting of the virus and of the cells with antibodies targeting monocyte (CD36) and lymphocyte (CD26) markers, it was possible to directly compare HIV-1 quasispecies archived in circulating monocytes and T lymphocytes with that present in plasma virions originated from the same cell types. Five chronically HIV-1 infected patients who underwent therapy interruption after prolonged HAART were enrolled in the study. The analysis was performed by the powerful technology of ultra-deep pyrosequencing after PCR amplification of part of the env gene, coding for the viral glycoprotein (gp) 120, encompassing the tropism-related V3 loop region. V3 amino acid sequences were used to establish heterogeneity parameters, to build phylogenetic trees and to predict co-receptor usage.ResultsThe heterogeneity of proviral and viral genomes derived from monocytes was higher than that of T-lymphocyte origin. Both monocytes and T lymphocytes might contribute to virus rebounding in the circulation after therapy interruptions, but other virus sources might also be involved. In addition, both proviral and circulating viral sequences from monocytes and T lymphocytes were predictive of a predominant R5 coreceptor usage. However, minor variants, segregating from the most frequent quasispecies variants, were present. In particular, in proviral genomes harboured by monocytes, minority variant clusters with a predicted X4 phenotype were found.ConclusionThis study provided the first direct comparison between the HIV-1 quasispecies archived as provirus in circulating monocytes and T lymphocytes with that of plasma virions replicating in the same cell types. Ultra-deep pyrosequencing generated data with some order of magnitude higher than any previously obtained with conventional approaches. Next generation sequencing allowed the analysis of previously inaccessible aspects of HIV-1 quasispecies, such as co-receptor usage of minority variants present in archived proviral sequences and in actually replicating virions, which may have clinical and therapeutic relevance.

Highlights

  • Virus-associated cell membrane proteins acquired by HIV-1 during budding may give information on the cellular source of circulating virions

  • The most variable part of the HIV-1 genome is the region coding for the V3 loop of HIV-1 surface glycoprotein that is involved in the coreceptor binding [3]

  • Proviral quasispecies harboured by monocytes and T lymphocytes of Pt.1 were analyzed after long term suppression of viremia

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Summary

Introduction

Virus-associated cell membrane proteins acquired by HIV-1 during budding may give information on the cellular source of circulating virions. The error prone nature of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, combined with the high replicative activity of the virus, results, in each infected individual, in the formation of many genetically related viral variants referred to as quasispecies, in which most viral sequences differ from all others. This variability is the substrate for the selective pressure exerted by drugs or by the immune system, leading to the continuous evolution of HIV-1 in the infected host [1,2]. While recent reports show that in patients treated with antiviral drugs HIV-1 quasispecies present in monocytes may evolve in clusters segregated from viral quasispecies harboured by lymphocytes [10,11], most HIV-1 compartmentalization studies have focused mainly on proviral DNAs in lymphomonocyte populations [1016]

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