HIV VIS Detail Information

> This page shows VIS [4017031] detail information, including site information (chromosome, GRCh38 location, disease, sample, etc) and literature information.


Site Information
DVID 4017031
Chromosome chr4
GRCh38 Location 449522
Disease   
Target Gene ABCA11P   ZNF721  
Literature Information
PubMed PMID 33016926
Year 2020 Nov 2;130(11):5847-5857
Journal The Journal of clinical investigation
Title HIV-1 viremia not suppressible by antiretroviral therapy can originate from large T cell clones producing infectious virus.
Author Halvas EK,Joseph KW,Brandt LD,Guo S,Sobolewski MD,Jacobs JL,Tumiotto C,Bui JK,Cyktor JC,Keele BF,Morse GD,Bale MJ,Shao W,Kearney MF,Coffin JM,Rausch JW,Wu X,Hughes SH,Mellors JW
Evidence BACKGROUNDHIV-1 viremia that is not suppressed by combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) is generally attributed to incomplete medication adherence and/or drug resistance. We evaluated individuals referred by clinicians for nonsuppressible viremia (plasma HIV-1 RNA above 40 copies/mL) despite reported adherence to ART and the absence of drug resistance to the current ART regimen.METHODSSamples were collected from at least 2 time points from 8 donors who had nonsuppressible viremia for more than 6 months. Single templates of HIV-1 RNA obtained from plasma and viral outgrowth of cultured cells and from proviral DNA were amplified by PCR and sequenced for evidence of clones of cells that produced infectious viruses. Clones were confirmed by host-proviral integration site analysis.RESULTSHIV-1 genomic RNA with identical sequences were identified in plasma samples from all 8 donors. The identical viral RNA sequences did not change over time and did not evolve resistance to the ART regimen. In 4 of the donors, viral RNA sequences obtained from plasma matched those sequences from viral outgrowth cultures, indicating that the viruses were replication competent. Integration sites for infectious proviruses from those 4 donors were mapped to the introns of the MATR3, ZNF268, ZNF721/ABCA11P, and ABCA11P genes. The sizes of the clones were estimated to be from 50 million to 350 million cells.CONCLUSIONThese findings show that clones of HIV-1-infected cells producing virus can cause failure of ART to suppress viremia. The mechanisms involved in clonal expansion and persistence need to be defined to effectively target viremia and the HIV-1 reservoir.FUNDINGNational Cancer Institute, NIH; Howard Hughes Medical Research Fellows Program, Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Office of AIDS Research; American Cancer Society; National Cancer Institute through a Leidos subcontract; National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, to the I4C Martin Delaney Collaboratory; University of Rochester Center for AIDS Research and University of Rochester HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials Unit.

Contents
Description
  • Site Information
Detail information of site [4017031]
  • Literature Information
The details of literature that this site is associated with.