학술논문

Antigen-driven clonal selection shapes the persistence of HIV-1 infected CD4+ T cells in vivo
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 131(3)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Infectious Diseases
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Clinical Research
HIV/AIDS
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Infection
Adult
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Clonal Selection
Antigen-Mediated
Female
HIV Infections
HIV-1
Humans
Male
Virus Integration
Virus Latency
gag Gene Products
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
AIDS/HIV
Adaptive immunity
Clonal selection
T cells
Medical and Health Sciences
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Clonal expansion of infected CD4+ T cells is a major mechanism of HIV-1 persistence and a barrier to achieving a cure. Potential causes are homeostatic proliferation, effects of HIV-1 integration, and interaction with antigens. Here, we show that it is possible to link antigen responsiveness, the full proviral sequence, the integration site, and the T cell receptor β-chain (TCRβ) sequence to examine the role of recurrent antigenic exposure in maintaining the HIV-1 reservoir. We isolated CMV- and Gag-responding CD4+ T cells from 10 treated individuals. Proviral populations in CMV-responding cells were dominated by large clones, including clones harboring replication-competent proviruses. TCRβ repertoires showed high clonality driven by converging adaptive responses. Although some proviruses were in genes linked to HIV-1 persistence (BACH2, STAT5B, MKL1), the proliferation of infected cells under antigenic stimulation occurred regardless of the site of integration. Paired TCRβ and integration site analysis showed that infection could occur early or late in the course of a clone's response to antigen and could generate infected cell populations too large to be explained solely by homeostatic proliferation. Together, these findings implicate antigen-driven clonal selection as a major factor in HIV-1 persistence, a finding that will be a difficult challenge to eradication efforts.