HIV integration sites in latently infected cell lines: evidence of ongoing replication

Jori Symons(Peter Doherty Institute), Abha Chopra(Murdoch University), Eva Malatinková(Ghent University Hospital), Ward De Spiegelaere(Ghent University Hospital), Shay Leary(Murdoch University), Don Cooper(Murdoch University), Chike O. Abana(Vanderbilt University), Ajantha Rhodes(University of Melbourne), Simin D. Rezaei(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Linos Vandekerckhove(Ghent University Hospital), S. Mallal(Vanderbilt University), Sharon R. Lewin(University of Melbourne), Paul Cameron(Monash University)
Retrovirology
January 13, 2017
Cited by 80Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Assessing the location and frequency of HIV integration sites in latently infected cells can potentially inform our understanding of how HIV persists during combination antiretroviral therapy. We developed a novel high throughput sequencing method to evaluate HIV integration sites in latently infected cell lines to determine whether there was virus replication or clonal expansion in these cell lines observed as multiple integration events at the same position. RESULTS: We modified a previously reported method using random DNA shearing and PCR to allow for high throughput robotic processing to identify the site and frequency of HIV integration in latently infected cell lines. Latently infected cell lines infected with intact virus demonstrated multiple distinct HIV integration sites (28 different sites in U1, 110 in ACH-2 and 117 in J1.1 per 150,000 cells). In contrast, cell lines infected with replication-incompetent viruses (J-Lat cells) demonstrated single integration sites. Following in vitro passaging of the ACH-2 cell line, we observed a significant increase in the frequency of unique HIV integration sites and there were multiple mutations and large deletions in the proviral DNA. When the ACH-2 cell line was cultured with the integrase inhibitor raltegravir, there was a significant decrease in the number of unique HIV integration sites and a transient increase in the frequency of 2-LTR circles consistent with virus replication in these cells. CONCLUSION: Cell lines latently infected with intact HIV demonstrated multiple unique HIV integration sites indicating that these cell lines are not clonal and in the ACH-2 cell line there was evidence of low level virus replication. These findings have implications for the use of latently infected cell lines as models of HIV latency and for the use of these cells as standards.


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