Impact of misclassified defective proviruses on HIV reservoir measurements

Author:

Reeves Daniel B.ORCID,Gaebler Christian,Oliveira Thiago Y.ORCID,Peluso Michael J.ORCID,Schiffer Joshua T.ORCID,Cohn Lillian B.,Deeks Steven G.ORCID,Nussenzweig Michel C.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractMost proviruses persisting in people living with HIV (PWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART) are defective. However, rarer intact proviruses almost always reinitiate viral rebound if ART stops. Therefore, assessing therapies to prevent viral rebound hinges on specifically quantifying intact proviruses. We evaluated the same samples from 10 male PWH on ART using the two-probe intact proviral DNA assay (IPDA) and near full length (nfl) Q4PCR. Both assays admitted similar ratios of intact to total HIV DNA, but IPDA found ~40-fold more intact proviruses. Neither assay suggested defective proviruses decay over 10 years. However, the mean intact half-lives were different: 108 months for IPDA and 65 months for Q4PCR. To reconcile this difference, we modeled additional longitudinal IPDA data and showed that decelerating intact decay could arise from very long-lived intact proviruses and/or misclassified defective proviruses: slowly decaying defective proviruses that are intact in IPDA probe locations (estimated up to 5%, in agreement with sequence library based predictions). The model also demonstrates how misclassification can lead to underestimated efficacy of therapies that exclusively reduce intact proviruses. We conclude that sensitive multi-probe assays combined with specific nfl-verified assays would be optimal to document absolute and changing levels of intact HIV proviruses.

Funder

Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Robert S. Wennett postdoctoral fellowship Shapiro-Silverberg Fund for the Advancement of Translational Research

Delaney AIDS Research Enterprise

REACH: Research Enterprise to Advance a Cure for HIV

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Einstein-Rockefeller-CUNY Center for AIDS Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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