HIV-1–infected T cell clones are shared across cerebrospinal fluid and blood during ART

Basic information
Cell
262,818
Sample
27

Technology
10X Genomics
Omics
scRNA-seq
Source
PBMCs

Dataset ID
38587074
Platform
Illumina HiSeq 4000
Species
Human
Disease
HIV infection,Healthy
Age range
31 - 62
Update date
2024-04-08
Summary

The central nervous system HIV reservoir is incompletely understood and is a major barrier to HIV cure. We profiled people with HIV (PWH) and uninfected controls through single-cell transcriptomic and T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing to understand the dynamics of HIV persistence in the CNS. In PWH on ART, we found that most participants had single cells containing HIV-1 RNA, which was found predominantly in CD4 central memory T cells, in both cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood. HIV-1 RNA-containing cells were found more frequently in CSF than blood, indicating a higher burden of reservoir cells in the CNS than blood for some PWH. Most CD4 T cell clones containing infected cells were compartment specific, while some (22%) - including rare clones with members of the clone containing detectable HIV RNA in both blood and CSF - were found in both CSF and blood. These results suggest that infected T cells trafficked between tissue compartments and that maintenance and expansion of infected T cell clones contributed to the CNS reservoir in PWH on ART.

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