Litcius/Paper detail

HIV-1 Transcription but Not Intact Provirus Levels are Associated With Systemic Inflammation

Alex Olson, Carolyn Coote, Jennifer Snyder‐Cappione, Nina Lin, Manish Sagar

2020The Journal of Infectious Diseases35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 1 have increased inflammation, which has been associated with age-associated diseases. Plasma markers, cell-associated virus levels, and ability to stimulate RNA transcription in latently infected cell lines was examined in younger and older HIV-1-infected individuals with suppressed virus. Cell-associated RNA, but not intact provirus level, had positive correlation with plasma D-dimer levels. Compared with the younger group, the older group had higher D-dimer levels and a trend toward more cell-associated RNA but similar levels of intact proviruses. Even though all measured inflammatory markers were relatively higher in the older group, this greater inflammation did not induce more HIV-1 transcription in latently infected cell lines. Inflammation and HIV-1 RNA expression increase with age despite similar levels of intact infectious HIV DNA. While plasma inflammation is correlated with HIV-1 RNA expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, it does not induce HIV-1 transcription in latently infected cell lines.

Topics & Concepts

ProvirusInflammationBiologyRNATranscription (linguistics)VirusPeripheral blood mononuclear cellVirologyImmunologySystemic inflammationVirus latencyCellViral replicationGeneGeneticsIn vitroLinguisticsPhilosophyGenomeHIV Research and TreatmentHIV-related health complications and treatmentsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions