Litcius/Paper detail

Subclinical Genital Herpes Shedding in HIV/Herpes Simplex Virus 2-Coinfected Women during Antiretroviral Therapy Is Associated with an Increase in HIV Tissue Reservoirs and Potentially Promotes HIV Evolution

Tajanna Stinn, Steve Kuntz, Dana Varon, Meei‐Li Huang, Stacy Selke, Samuel Njikan, Emily S. Ford, Joan Dragavon, Robert W. Coombs, Christine Johnston, Marta E. Bull

2020Journal of Virology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Persons with HIV infection are frequently coinfected with chronic herpesviruses, which periodically replicate and produce viable herpes virions, particularly in anogenital and cervical tissues. Persistent protein expression results in proliferation of CD8 + and CD4 + T cells, and the latter could potentially expand and sustain HIV tissue reservoirs. We found HSV genital shedding rates were positively correlated with HIV DNA concentrations and HIV divergence from ancestral sequences in tissues. Our work suggests that immune responses to common coinfections, such as herpesviruses, may sustain HIV tissue reservoirs during suppressive ART, suggesting future cure strategies should study interventions to suppress replication or reactivation of chronic herpes infections.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVirologySubclinical infectionHerpes simplex virusViral replicationViral sheddingVirusCD8Viral loadImmunologyImmune systemSex organAntiretroviral therapyLentivirusViral diseaseGeneticsHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsHIV Research and TreatmentCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research