Quantification of HIV DNA using droplet digital PCR techniques

EM Anderson, F Maldarelli - Current protocols in microbiology, 2018 - Wiley Online Library
EM Anderson, F Maldarelli
Current protocols in microbiology, 2018Wiley Online Library
HIV persists, despite effective antiretroviral therapy, in long‐lived cells, posing a major
barrier toward a cure. A key step in the HIV replication cycle and a hallmark of the
Retroviridae family is the integration of the viral DNA into the host genome. Once integrated,
HIV expression is regulated by host machinery and the provirus persists until the cell dies. A
reservoir of cells harboring replication‐competent proviruses can survive for years, and
mechanisms that maintain that reservoir are under investigation. The majority of integrated …
Abstract
HIV persists, despite effective antiretroviral therapy, in long‐lived cells, posing a major barrier toward a cure. A key step in the HIV replication cycle and a hallmark of the Retroviridae family is the integration of the viral DNA into the host genome. Once integrated, HIV expression is regulated by host machinery and the provirus persists until the cell dies. A reservoir of cells harboring replication‐competent proviruses can survive for years, and mechanisms that maintain that reservoir are under investigation. The majority of integrated proviruses, however, are defective or have large deletions, and the composition of the proviral landscape during therapy remains unknown. Methods to quantify HIV proviruses are useful in investigating HIV persistence. Presented in this unit is a method for total HIV DNA quantification of various HIV genome targets that utilizes the next‐generation PCR platform, digital PCR. The abundance of various HIV gene targets reflects the overall proviral composition. In this protocol, total genomic DNA is isolated from patient‐derived cells and then used as a template for droplet digital PCR, in which the PCR reaction is partitioned into approximately 20,000 individual droplets, PCR amplified to an end point, and subjected to absolute quantification by counting the number of positive and negative droplets. Copy number is directly calculated using straightforward Poisson correction. Additionally, this methodological approach can be used to obtain absolute quantification of other DNA targets. © 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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