scholarly journals HIV Diversity Considerations in the Application of the Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA)

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalie N. Kinloch ◽  
Yanqin Ren ◽  
Winiffer D. Conce Alberto ◽  
Winnie Dong ◽  
Pragya Khadka ◽  
...  

Opening Paragraph (serves as abstract for submission) and BodyThe Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) was developed to address the critical need for a precise and scalable method for intact HIV reservoir quantification1. This duplexed droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) assay simultaneously targets the HIV Packaging Signal (Ψ) and the Rev Responsive Element (RRE) within Envelope (env) to distinguish genomically intact proviruses against a large background of defective ones2. The IPDA requires less time, resources, and biological material than the gold standard for replication-competent HIV reservoir measurement, the Quantitative Viral Outgrowth Assay (QVOA)3, and is being adopted in research and clinical studies4–7. In our cohort of HIV-1 subtype B-infected individuals from North America however, the IPDA yielded a 28% failure rate due to HIV polymorphism. We further demonstrate that within-host HIV diversity can lead the IPDA to underestimate intact HIV reservoir size, which could negatively impact clinical trial results interpretation. While the IPDA represents an important methodological advance, HIV diversity should be addressed before its widespread adoption.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalie N. Kinloch ◽  
Yanqin Ren ◽  
Winiffer D. Conce Alberto ◽  
Winnie Dong ◽  
Pragya Khadka ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) was developed to address the critical need for a scalable method for intact HIV-1 reservoir quantification. This droplet digital PCR-based assay simultaneously targets two HIV-1 regions to distinguish genomically intact proviruses against a large background of defective ones, and its application has yielded insights into HIV-1 persistence. Reports of assay failures however, attributed to HIV-1 polymorphism, have recently emerged. Here, we describe a diverse North American cohort of people with HIV-1 subtype B, where the IPDA yielded a failure rate of 28% due to viral polymorphism. We further demonstrate that within-host HIV-1 diversity can lead the IPDA to underestimate intact reservoir size, and provide examples of how this phenomenon could lead to erroneous interpretation of clinical trial data. While the IPDA represents a major methodological advance, HIV-1 diversity should be addressed before its widespread adoption as a principal readout in HIV-1 remission trials.


2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fredrick H. Omondi ◽  
Sandali Chandrarathna ◽  
Shariq Mujib ◽  
Chanson J. Brumme ◽  
Steven W. Jin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe HIV accessory protein Nef modulates key immune evasion and pathogenic functions, and its encoding gene region exhibits high sequence diversity. Given the recent identification of early HIV-specific adaptive immune responses as novel correlates of HIV reservoir size, we hypothesized that viral factors that facilitate the evasion of such responses—namely, Nef genetic and functional diversity—might also influence reservoir establishment and/or persistence. We isolated baseline plasma HIV RNA-derivednefclones from 30 acute/early-infected individuals who participated in a clinical trial of early combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) (<6 months following infection) and assessed each Nef clone's ability to downregulate CD4 and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class Iin vitro. We then explored the relationships between baseline clinical, immunological, and virological characteristics and the HIV reservoir size measured 48 weeks following initiation of suppressive cART (where the reservoir size was quantified in terms of the proviral DNA loads as well as the levels of replication-competent HIV in CD4+T cells). Maximal within-host Nef-mediated downregulation of HLA, but not CD4, correlated positively with post-cART proviral DNA levels (Spearman'sR = 0.61,P = 0.0004) and replication-competent reservoir sizes (Spearman'sR = 0.36,P = 0.056) in univariable analyses. Furthermore, the Nef-mediated HLA downregulation function was retained in final multivariable models adjusting for established clinical and immunological correlates of reservoir size. Finally, HIV subtype B-infected persons (n = 25) harbored significantly larger viral reservoirs than non-subtype B-infected persons (2 infected with subtype CRF01_AE and 3 infected with subtype G). Our results highlight a potentially important role of viral factors—in particular, HIV subtype and accessory protein function—in modulating viral reservoir establishment and persistence.IMPORTANCEWhile combination antiretroviral therapies (cART) have transformed HIV infection into a chronic manageable condition, they do not act upon the latent HIV reservoir and are therefore not curative. As HIV cure or remission should be more readily achievable in individuals with smaller HIV reservoirs, achieving a deeper understanding of the clinical, immunological, and virological determinants of reservoir size is critical to eradication efforts. We performed apost hocanalysis of 30 participants of a clinical trial of early cART who had previously been assessed in detail for their clinical, immunological, and reservoir size characteristics. We observed that the HIV subtype and autologous Nef-mediated HLA downregulation function correlated with the viral reservoir size measured approximately 1 year post-cART initiation. Our findings highlight virological characteristics—both genetic and functional—as possible novel determinants of HIV reservoir establishment and persistence.


Author(s):  
Emmanouil Papasavvas ◽  
Livio Azzoni ◽  
Brian N Ross ◽  
Matthew Fair ◽  
Zhe Yuan ◽  
...  

Abstract Accurate characterization of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reservoir is imperative to develop an effective cure. HIV was measured in antiretroviral therapy-suppressed individuals using the intact proviral DNA assay (IPDA), along with assays for total or integrated HIV DNA, and inducible HIV RNA or p24. Intact provirus correlated with total and integrated HIV.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Gaebler ◽  
Shane D. Falcinelli ◽  
Elina Stoffel ◽  
Jenna Read ◽  
Ross Murtagh ◽  
...  

AbstractThe HIV proviral reservoir is the major barrier to cure. The predominantly replication-defective proviral landscape makes the measurement of virus that is likely to cause rebound upon ART-cessation challenging. To address this issue, novel assays to measure intact HIV proviruses have been developed. The Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) is a high-throughput assay that uses two probes to exclude the majority of defective proviruses and determine the frequency of intact proviruses, albeit without sequence confirmation. Quadruplex PCR with four probes (Q4PCR), is a lower-throughput assay that uses limiting dilution long distance PCR amplification followed by qPCR and near-full length genome sequencing (nFGS) to estimate the frequency of sequence-confirmed intact proviruses and provide insight into their clonal composition. To explore the advantages and limitations of these assays, we compared IPDA and Q4PCR measurements from 39 ART-suppressed people living with HIV. We found that IPDA and Q4PCR measurements correlated with one another but frequencies of intact proviral DNA differed by approximately 19-fold. This difference may be in part due to inefficiencies in long distance PCR amplification of proviruses in Q4PCR, leading to underestimates of intact proviral frequencies. In addition, nFGS analysis within Q4PCR explained that some of this difference is explained by proviruses that are classified as intact by IPDA but carry defects elsewhere in the genome. Taken together, this head-to-head comparison of novel intact proviral DNA assays provides important context for their interpretation in studies to deplete the HIV reservoir and shows that together the assays bracket true reservoir size.ImportanceThe Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) and Quadruplex PCR (Q4PCR) represent major advances in accurately quantifying and characterizing the replication competent HIV reservoir. This study compares the two novel approaches for measuring intact HIV proviral DNA in samples from 39 ART-suppressed people living with HIV, thereby informing ongoing efforts to deplete the HIV reservoir in cure-related trials.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Gaebler ◽  
Shane D. Falcinelli ◽  
Elina Stoffel ◽  
Jenna Read ◽  
Ross Murtagh ◽  
...  

The HIV proviral reservoir is the major barrier to cure. The predominantly replication-defective proviral landscape makes the measurement of virus that is likely to cause rebound upon ART-cessation challenging. To address this issue, novel assays to measure intact HIV proviruses have been developed. The Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) is a high-throughput assay that uses two probes to exclude the majority of defective proviruses and determine the frequency of intact proviruses, albeit without sequence confirmation. Quadruplex PCR with four probes (Q4PCR), is a lower-throughput assay that uses limiting dilution long distance PCR amplification followed by qPCR and near-full length genome sequencing (nFGS) to estimate the frequency of sequence-confirmed intact proviruses and provide insight into their clonal composition. To explore the advantages and limitations of these assays, we compared IPDA and Q4PCR measurements from 39 ART-suppressed people living with HIV. We found that IPDA and Q4PCR measurements correlated with one another but frequencies of intact proviral DNA differed by approximately 19-fold. This difference may be in part due to inefficiencies in long distance PCR amplification of proviruses in Q4PCR, leading to underestimates of intact proviral frequencies. In addition, nFGS analysis within Q4PCR explained that some of this difference is explained by proviruses that are classified as intact by IPDA but carry defects elsewhere in the genome. Taken together, this head-to-head comparison of novel intact proviral DNA assays provides important context for their interpretation in studies to deplete the HIV reservoir and shows that together the assays bracket true reservoir size. IMPORTANCE The Intact Proviral DNA Assay (IPDA) and Quadruplex PCR (Q4PCR) represent major advances in accurately quantifying and characterizing the replication competent HIV reservoir. This study compares the two novel approaches for measuring intact HIV proviral DNA in samples from 39 ART-suppressed people living with HIV, thereby informing ongoing efforts to deplete the HIV reservoir in cure-related trials.


Author(s):  
Hanh T Pham ◽  
Brunna M Alves ◽  
Sunbin Yoo ◽  
Meng A Xiao ◽  
Jing Leng ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives The development of HIV drug resistance against the integrase strand transfer inhibitor dolutegravir is rare. We report here the transient detection, by near full-genome ultradeep sequencing, of minority HIV-1 subtype B variants bearing the S153F and R263K integrase substitutions in the proviral DNA from blood cells of one patient who successfully initiated dolutegravir-based ART, over 24 weeks. Our objective was to study the effects of these substitutions. Methods Strand transfer and DNA-binding activities of recombinant integrase proteins were measured in cell-free assays. Cell-based resistance, infectivity and replicative capacities were measured using molecular clones. Structural modelling was performed to understand experimental results. Results R263K emerged first, followed by the addition of S153F at Week 12. By Week 24, both mutations remained present, but at lower prevalence. We confirmed the coexistence of S153F and R263K on single viral genomes. Combining S153F or S153Y with R263K decreased integration and viral replicative capacity and conferred high levels of drug resistance against all integrase inhibitors. Alone, S153Y and S153F did little to infectivity or dolutegravir resistance. We identified altered DNA binding as a mechanism of resistance. The patient remained with undetectable viral loads at all timepoints. Conclusions Drug-resistant minority variants have often been reported under suppressive ART. Our study adds to these observations by unravelling a progression towards higher levels of resistance through a novel pathway despite continuous undetectable viral loads. Poorly replicative HIV drug-resistant minority proviral variants did not compromise viral suppression in one individual treated with dolutegravir.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 100885
Author(s):  
Claire N. Levy ◽  
Sean M. Hughes ◽  
Pavitra Roychoudhury ◽  
Chelsea Amstuz ◽  
Haiying Zhu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingrong Ye ◽  
Yiming Shao ◽  
Hongyan Lu

Abstract HIV subtypes convey important epidemiological information and possibly influence the rate of disease progression. In this study, HIV disease progression in patients infected with CRF01_AE, CRF07_BC, and subtype B was compared in the largest HIV molecular epidemiology study ever done in China. A national data set of HIV pol sequences was assembled by pooling sequences from public databases and the Beijing HIV laboratory network. Logistic regression was used to assess factors associated with the risk of AIDS at diagnosis ([AIDSAD], defined as a CD4 count <200 cells/µL) in patients with HIV subtype B, CRF01_AE, and CRF07_BC. Of the 20,663 sequences, 9,156 (44.3%) were CRF01_AE. CRF07_BC was responsible for 28.3% of infections, followed by B (13.9%). In multivariable analysis, the risk of AIDSAD differed significantly according to HIV subtype (OR for CRF07_BC vs. B: 0.46, 95% CI 0.39─0.53), age (OR for ≥65 years vs. <18 years: 4.3 95% CI 1.81─11.8), and transmission risk groups (OR for man who have sex with man vs. heterosexual: 0.67 95% CI 0.6─0.75). These findings suggest that HIV diversity in China is constantly evolving and gaining complexity. CRF07_BC is less pathogenic than subtype B, while CRF01_AE is as pathogenic as B.


2015 ◽  
Vol 90 (6) ◽  
pp. 2806-2817 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Guenaga ◽  
Viktoriya Dubrovskaya ◽  
Natalia de Val ◽  
Shailendra K. Sharma ◽  
Barbara Carrette ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDue to high viral diversity, an effective HIV-1 vaccine will likely require Envs derived from multiple subtypes to generate broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). Soluble Env mimics, like the native flexibly linked (NFL) and SOSIP trimers, derived from the subtype A BG505 Env, form homogeneous, stable native-like trimers. However, other Env sequences, such as JRFL and 16055 from subtypes B and C, do so to a lesser degree. The high-resolution BG505 SOSIP crystal structures permit the identification and redesign of Env elements involved in trimer stability. Here, we identified structure trimer-derived (TD) residues that increased the propensity of the subtype B JRFL and subtype C 16055 Env sequences to form well-ordered, homogenous, and highly stable soluble trimers. The generation of these spike mimics no longer required antibody-based selection, positive or negative. Using the redesigned subtype B and C trimer representatives as respective foundations, we further stabilized the NFL TD trimers by engineering an intraprotomer disulfide linkage in the prebridging sheet, I201C-A433C (CC), that locks the gp120 in the receptor nontriggered state. We demonstrated that this disulfide pair prevented CD4 induced-conformational rearrangements in NFL trimers derived from the prototypic subtype A, B, and C representatives. Coupling the TD-based design with the engineered disulfide linkage, CC, increased the propensity of Env to form soluble highly stable spike mimics that are resistant to CD4-induced changes. These advances will allow testing of the hypothesis that such stabilized immunogens will more efficiently elicit neutralizing antibodies in small-animal models and primates.IMPORTANCEHIV-1 displays unprecedented global diversity circulating in the human population. Since the envelope glycoprotein (Env) is the target of neutralizing antibodies, Env-based vaccine candidates that address such diversity are needed. Soluble well-ordered Env mimics, typified by NFL and SOSIP trimers, are attractive vaccine candidates. However, the current designs do not allow most Envs to form well-ordered trimers. Here, we made design modifications to increase the propensity of representatives from two of the major HIV subtypes to form highly stable trimers. This approach should be applicable to other viral Envs, permitting the generation of a repertoire of homogeneous, highly stable trimers. The availability of such an array will allow us to assess if sequential or cocktail immune strategies can overcome some of the vaccine challenges presented by HIV diversity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (31) ◽  
pp. 18692-18700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco R. Simonetti ◽  
Jennifer A. White ◽  
Camille Tumiotto ◽  
Kristen D. Ritter ◽  
Mian Cai ◽  
...  

A scalable approach for quantifying intact HIV-1 proviruses is critical for basic research and clinical trials directed at HIV-1 cure. The intact proviral DNA assay (IPDA) is a novel approach to characterizing the HIV-1 reservoir, focusing on the genetic integrity of individual proviruses independent of transcriptional status. It uses multiplex digital droplet PCR to distinguish and separately quantify intact proviruses, defined by a lack of overt fatal defects such as large deletions and APOBEC3G-mediated hypermutation, from the majority of proviruses that have such defects. This distinction is important because only intact proviruses cause viral rebound on ART interruption. To evaluate IPDA performance and provide benchmark data to support its implementation, we analyzed peripheral blood samples from 400 HIV-1+adults on ART from several diverse cohorts, representing a robust sample of treated HIV-1 infection in the United States. We provide direct quantitative evidence that defective proviruses greatly outnumber intact proviruses (by >12.5 fold). However, intact proviruses are present at substantially higher frequencies (median, 54/106CD4+T cells) than proviruses detected by the quantitative viral outgrowth assay, which requires induction and in vitro growth (∼1/106CD4+T cells). IPDA amplicon signal issues resulting from sequence polymorphisms were observed in only 6.3% of individuals and were readily apparent and easily distinguished from low proviral frequency, an advantage of the IPDA over standard PCR assays which generate false-negative results in such situations. The large IPDA dataset provided here gives the clearest quantitative picture to date of HIV-1 proviral persistence on ART.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document