Persistence of episomal HIV-1 infection intermediates in patients on highly active anti-retroviral therapy

被引:0
|
作者
Mark E. Sharkey
Ian Teo
Thomas Greenough
Natalia Sharova
Katherine Luzuriaga
John L. Sullivan
R. Pat Bucy
Leondios G. Kostrikis
Ashley Haase
Claire Veryard
Raul E. Davaro
Sarah H. Cheeseman
Jennifer S. Daly
Carol Bova
Richard T. Ellison
Brian Mady
Kwan Kew Lai
Graeme Moyle
Mark Nelson
Brian Gazzard
Sunil Shaunak
Mario Stevenson
机构
[1] University of Massachusetts Medical School,Department of Infectious Diseases
[2] Program in Molecular Medicine,Department of Pediatrics
[3] Imperial College School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
[4] Hammersmith Hospital,Department of Microbiology
[5] Du Cane Road,Division of Infectious Diseases
[6] University of Massachusetts Medical School,undefined
[7] University of Alabama at Birmingham,undefined
[8] SW W287,undefined
[9] Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center,undefined
[10] Rockefeller University,undefined
[11] University of Minnesota,undefined
[12] University of Massachusetts/Memorial Health Care,undefined
[13] Chelsea and Westminster Hospital,undefined
来源
Nature Medicine | 2000年 / 6卷
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摘要
Treatment of HIV-1-infected individuals with a combination of anti-retroviral agents results in sustained suppression of HIV-1 replication, as evidenced by a reduction in plasma viral RNA to levels below the limit of detection of available assays1,2. However, even in patients whose plasma viral RNA levels have been suppressed to below detectable levels for up to 30 months, replication-competent virus can routinely be recovered from patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells3,4 and from semen5. A reservoir of latently infected cells established early in infection6 may be involved in the maintenance of viral persistence despite highly active anti-retroviral therapy3,4,5. However, whether virus replication persists in such patients is unknown. HIV-1 cDNA episomes are labile products of virus infection and indicative of recent infection events. Using episome-specific PCR, we demonstrate here ongoing virus replication in a large percentage of infected individuals on highly active anti-retroviral therapy, despite sustained undetectable levels of plasma viral RNA. The presence of a reservoir of ‘covert’ virus replication in patients on highly active anti-retroviral therapy has important implications for the clinical management of HIV-1-infected individuals and for the development of virus eradication strategies.
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页码:76 / 81
页数:5
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