Autopsy Study Defines Composition and Dynamics of the HIV-1 Reservoir after Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation with CCR5Δ32/Δ32 Donor Cells

  • Laura E P Huyveneers
  • Anke Bruns
  • Arjen Stam
  • Pauline Ellerbroek
  • Dorien de Jong
  • Noémi A Nagy
  • Stephanie B H Gumbs
  • Kiki Tesselaar
  • Kobus Bosman
  • Maria Salgado
  • Gero Hütter
  • Lodewijk A A Brosens
  • Mi Kwon
  • Jose Diez Martin
  • Jan T M van der Meer
  • Theun M de Kort
  • Asier Sáez-Cirión
  • Julian Schulze Zur Wiesch
  • Jaap Jan Boelens
  • Javier Martinez-Picado
  • Jürgen H E Kuball
  • Annemarie M J Wensing (Shared last author)
  • Monique Nijhuis (Shared last author)
  • IciStem Consortium

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Abstract

Allo-HSCT with CCR5Δ32/Δ32 donor cells is the only curative HIV-1 intervention. We investigated the impact of allo-HSCT on the viral reservoir in PBMCs and post-mortem tissue in two patients. IciS-05 and IciS-11 both received a CCR5Δ32/Δ32 allo-HSCT. Before allo-HSCT, ultrasensitive HIV-1 RNA quantification; HIV-1-DNA quantification; co-receptor tropism analysis; deep-sequencing and viral characterization in PBMCs and bone marrow; and post-allo-HSCT, ultrasensitive RNA and HIV-1-DNA quantification were performed. Proviral quantification, deep sequencing, and viral characterization were done in post-mortem tissue samples. Both patients harbored subtype B CCR5-tropic HIV-1 as determined genotypically and functionally by virus culture. Pre-allo-HSCT, HIV-1-DNA could be detected in both patients in bone marrow, PBMCs, and T-cell subsets. Chimerism correlated with detectable HIV-1-DNA LTR copies in cells and tissues. Post-mortem analysis of IciS-05 revealed proviral DNA in all tissue biopsies, but not in PBMCs. In patient IciS-11, who was transplanted twice, no HIV-1-DNA could be detected in PBMCs at the time of death, whereas HIV-1-DNA was detectable in the lymph node. In conclusion, shortly after CCR5Δ32/Δ32, allo-HSCT HIV-1-DNA became undetectable in PBMCs. However, HIV-1-DNA variants identical to those present before transplantation persisted in post-mortem-obtained tissues, indicating that these tissues play an important role as viral reservoirs.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number2069
ISSN1999-4915
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17.09.2022
PubMed 36146874