Reservoirs of infectious HIV-1 persist despite years of combination antiretroviral therapy and make curing HIV-1 infections a major challenge. Most of the proviral DNA resides in CD4+T cells. Some of these CD4+T cells are clonally expanded; most of the proviruses are defective. It is not known if any of the clonally expanded cells carry replication-competent proviruses. We report that a highly expanded CD4+ T-cell clone contains an intact provirus. The highly expanded clone produced infectious virus that was detected as persistent plasma viremia during cART in an HIV-1–infected patient who had squamous cell cancer. Cells containing the intact provirus were widely distributed and significantly enriched in cancer metastases. These results show that clonally expanded CD4+T cells can be a reservoir of infectious HIV-1.
BACKGROUND. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects approximately 170 million people worldwide and may lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in chronically infected individuals. Treatment is rapidly evolving from IFN-α-based therapies to IFN-α-free regimens that consist of directly acting antiviral agents (DAAs), which demonstrate improved efficacy and tolerability in clinical trials. Virologic relapse after DAA therapy is a common cause of treatment failure; however, it is not clear why relapse occurs or whether certain individuals are more prone to recurrent viremia.
METHODS.We conducted a clinical trial using the DAA sofosbuvir plus ribavirin (SOF/RBV) and performed detailed mRNA expression analysis in liver and peripheral blood from patients who achieved either a sustained virologic response (SVR) or relapsed.
RESULTS.On-treatment viral clearance was accompanied by rapid downregulation of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) in liver and blood, regardless of treatment outcome. Analysis of paired pretreatment and end of treatment (EOT) liver biopsies from SVR patients showed that viral clearance was accompanied by decreased expression of type II and III IFNs, but unexpectedly increased expression of the type I IFN IFNA2. mRNA expression of ISGs was higher in EOT liver biopsies of patients who achieved SVR than in patients who later relapsed.
CONCLUSION.These results suggest that restoration of type I intrahepatic IFN signaling by EOT may facilitate HCV eradication and prevention of relapse upon withdrawal of SOF/RBV. TRIAL REGISTRATION. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01441180.
FUNDING. Intramural Programs of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
C l i n i C a l M e d i C i n e3 3 5 3 jci.orgVolume 124 Number 8 August 2014We next evaluated on-treatment serum protein levels of select chemokines and cytokines and observed similar expression at baseline and during treatment comparing patients who achieved SVR versus those who relapsed (Supplemental Table 3). Serum levels of the IFN-inducible cytokine IP-10, the protein product of the CXCL10 gene that was downregulated in liver (Figure 2A), correlated significantly with baseline viral load ( Figure 3A). Expression decreased rapidly on-treatment, regardless of treatment outcome, and increased with relapse ( Figure 3B). Viral kinetic and IP-10 decline were significantly correlated ( Figure 3C and Table 1). IL-10 and IFN-γ decreased modestly during treatment, while expression of most other proteins did not change, including TGF-β1 and TIMP1, which are associated with hepatic fibrosis (Supplemental Table 3 and ref. 25).To assess whether a similar pattern of gene expression changes could be observed in the periphery, we performed microarray mRNA analysis in PBMCs collected before treatment, early in treatment (day 6-11), and at EOT (week 24) and identified a significant decrease of IFN signaling during treatment (Supplemental Figure 2 and Supplemental Table 4). qRT-PCR analysis in PBMCs confirmed rapid and sustained downregulation of I...
Intermittent courses of interleukin-2 can improve some of the immunologic abnormalities associated with HIV infection in patients with more than 200 CD4 cells per cubic millimeter.
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