| Literature DB >> 29316955 |
Xiao Qian Wang1, Sarah Palmer2.
Abstract
Antiretroviral therapy effectively suppresses, but does not eradicate HIV-1 infection. Persistent low-level HIV-1 can still be detected in plasma and cellular reservoirs even after years of effective therapy, and cessation of current treatments invariably results in resumption of viral replication. Efforts to eradicate persistent HIV-1 require a comprehensive examination of the quantity and genetic composition of HIV-1 within the plasma and infected cells located in the peripheral blood and tissues throughout the body. Single-molecule techniques, such as the single-copy assay and single-genome/proviral sequencing assays, have been employed to further our understanding of the source and viral dynamics of persistent HIV-1 during long-term effective therapy. The application of the single-copy assay, which quantifies plasma HIV-1 RNA down to a single copy, has revealed that viremia persists in the plasma and CSF after years of effective therapy. This low-level HIV-1 RNA also persists in the plasma following treatment intensification, treatment with latency reversing agents, cancer-related therapy, and bone marrow transplantation. Single-genome/proviral sequencing assays genetically characterise HIV-1 populations after passing through different selective pressures related to cell type, tissue type, compartment, or therapy. The application of these assays has revealed that the intracellular HIV-1 reservoir is stable and mainly located in CD4+ memory T cells. Moreover, this intracellular HIV-1 reservoir is primarily maintained by cellular proliferation due to homeostasis and antigenic stimulation, although cryptic replication may take place in anatomic sites where treatment is sub-optimal. The employment of single-genome/proviral sequencing showed that latency reversing agents broadly activate quiescent proviruses but do not clear the intracellular reservoir. Recently, full-length individual proviral sequencing assays have been developed and the application of these assays has revealed that the majority of intracellular HIV-1 DNA is genetically defective. In addition, the employment of these assays has shown that genetically intact proviruses are unequally distributed in memory T cell subsets during antiretroviral therapy. The application of single-molecule assays has enhanced the understanding of the source and dynamics of persistent HIV-1 in the plasma and cells of HIV-infected individuals. Future studies of the persistent HIV-1 reservoir and new treatment strategies to eradicate persistent virus will benefit from the utilization of these assays.Entities:
Keywords: Full-length individual proviral sequencing; Intracellular HIV-1 reservoirs; Persistent HIV-1; Single-copy assay; Single-genome/proviral sequencing; Single-molecule assays
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29316955 PMCID: PMC5761141 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-017-0386-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1Single-genome/proviral sequencing overestimates the amount of replication-competent proviruses. p6-RT region shown in orange and V1–V3 env region shown in green
A comparison of the strengths and weaknesses of cell culture and PCR-based assays for the quantification of the HIV-1 reservoir
| Assay name | PCR or cell culture based | Strengths of the assay | Weaknesses of the assay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quantification of HIV-1 RNA in plasma and CSF | PCR | Fast and high throughput | The low levels of viremia in participants on long-term ART could affect accuracy of this assay. Not a true representation of the intracellular reservoir |
| Quantification of intracellular HIV-1 RNA and DNA | PCR | Fast and high throughput | Overestimates the size of the reservoir. Does not provide an indication of replication competency |
| Single-genome sequencing | PCR | High throughput | Overestimates the size of the reservoir. Does not provide an indication of replication competency |
| Full-length individual proviral sequencing | PCR | Relatively high throughput | Expensive technique. Slightly overestimates the size of the reservoir. Replication competency of genetically intact proviruses will require confirmation by in vitro assays |
| Quantitative viral outgrowth assay | Cell culture | Quantifies replication-competent virus | Requires large numbers of resting memory T cells and is labour-intensive. Underestimates the size of the reservoir due to non-induced proviruses |
| Tat/rev induced limiting dilution assay | Cell culture | Gives an indication of the size of the inducible reservoir | Requires sizeable numbers of cells and cannot be used for sorted T cell subsets. Overestimates the size of the reservoir |