Single-cell multiomics reveals persistence of HIV-1 in expanded cytotoxic T cell clones

Basic information
Cell
215,458
Sample
14

Technology
10X Genomics
Omics
ECCITE-seq,scRNA-seq
Source
PBMCs

Dataset ID
35320704
Platform
Illumina HiSeq 4000,NovaSeq 6000
Species
Human
Disease
HIV infection,Healthy
Age range
21 - 31
Update date
2022-06-14
Summary

Understanding the drivers and markers of clonally expanding HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cells is essential for HIV-1 eradication. We used single-cell ECCITE-seq, which captures surface protein expression, cellular transcriptome, HIV-1 RNA, and TCR sequences within the same single cell to track clonal expansion dynamics in longitudinally archived samples from six HIV-1-infected individuals (during viremia and after suppressive antiretroviral therapy) and two uninfected individuals, in unstimulated conditions and after CMV and HIV-1 antigen stimulation. Despite antiretroviral therapy, persistent antigen and TNF responses shaped T cell clonal expansion. HIV-1 resided in Th1-polarized, antigen-responding T cells expressing BCL2 and SERPINB9 that may resist cell death. HIV-1 RNA+ T cell clones were larger in clone size, established during viremia, persistent after viral suppression, and enriched in GZMB+ cytotoxic effector memory Th1 cells. Targeting HIV-1-infected cytotoxic CD4+ T cells and drivers of clonal expansion provides another direction for HIV-1 eradication.

Overall design

overall_design too long too uplode

Contributors

To be supplemented.

Contact

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snRNA-Seq
Sample nameSample titleDiseaseGenderAgeSourceTreatmentTechnologyPlatformOmicsSample IDDataset IDAction
No data available