The decay of the latent reservoir of replication-competent HIV-1 is inversely correlated with the extent of residual viral replication during prolonged anti-retroviral …

B Ramratnam, JE Mittler, L Zhang, D Boden, A Hurley… - Nature medicine, 2000 - nature.com
B Ramratnam, JE Mittler, L Zhang, D Boden, A Hurley, F Fang, CA Macken, AS Perelson
Nature medicine, 2000nature.com
Replication-competent HIV-1 can be isolated from infected patients despite prolonged
plasma virus suppression by anti-retroviral treatment 1, 2, 3. Recent studies have identified
resting, memory CD4+ T lymphocytes as a long-lived latent reservoir of HIV-1 (refs. 4, 5).
Cross-sectional analyses indicate that the reservoir is rather small, between 10 3 and 10 7
cells per patient 5, 6. In individuals whose plasma viremia levels are well suppressed by anti-
retroviral therapy, peripheral blood mononuclear cells containing replication-competent HIV …
Abstract
Replication-competent HIV-1 can be isolated from infected patients despite prolonged plasma virus suppression by anti-retroviral treatment 1, 2, 3. Recent studies have identified resting, memory CD4+ T lymphocytes as a long-lived latent reservoir of HIV-1 (refs. 4, 5). Cross-sectional analyses indicate that the reservoir is rather small, between 10 3 and 10 7 cells per patient 5, 6. In individuals whose plasma viremia levels are well suppressed by anti-retroviral therapy, peripheral blood mononuclear cells containing replication-competent HIV-1 were found to decay with a mean half-life of approximately 6 months 7, close to the decay characteristics of memory lymphocytes in humans and monkeys 8, 9, 10. In contrast, little decay was found in a less-selective patient population 11. We undertook this study to address this apparent discrepancy. Using a quantitative micro-culture assay, we demonstrate here that the latent reservoir decays with a mean half-life of 6.3 months in patients who consistently maintain plasma HIV-1 RNA levels of fewer than 50 copies/ml. Slower decay rates occur in individuals who experience intermittent episodes of plasma viremia. Our findings indicate that the persistence of the latent reservoir of HIV-1 despite prolonged treatment is due not only to its slow intrinsic decay characteristics but also to the inability of current drug regimens to completely block HIV-1 replication.
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