The HIV integrase inhibitor, dolutegravir (DTG), in the absence of eliciting integrase (int) resistance, has been reported to select mutations in the virus 3′-polypurine tract (3′-PPT) adjacent to the 3′-LTR U3. An analog of DTG, cabotegravir (CAB), has a high genetic barrier to drug resistance and is used in formulations for treatment and long-acting pre-exposure prophylaxis. We examined whether mutations observed for DTG would emerge in vitro with CAB. HIV-1IIIB was cultured in paired experiments of continuous high (300 nM) CAB initiated 2 h or 24 h after infection. After eight months of CAB treatment, no int resistance was detected. Conversely, HIV RNA 3′-PPT mutants were detected within one month and were the majority virus by day 98. The appearance of 3′-PPT variants coincided with a rapid accumulation of HIV 1-LTR and 2-LTR circles. RNA amplification from the 3′-LTR TAR identified transcripts crossing 2-LTR circle junctions, which incorporated the adjacent U5 sequence identical to the 3′-PPT mutants. 3′-PPT variants were only identified in LTR circles and transcripts. Additionally, we found evidence of linear HIV and LTR circle recombination with human DNA at motifs homologous to 3′-PPT sequences. HIV persistence under CAB was associated with transcription and recombination of LTR circle sequences.
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