The role of Nef in the long-term persistence of the replication-competent HIV reservoir in South African women
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HIV-1 Nef mediates immune evasion and viral pathogenesis in part through downregulation of cell surface cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4) and major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) on infected cells. While Nef function of circulating viral populations found early in infection has been associated with reservoir size in early-treated cohorts, there is limited research on how its activity impacts reservoir size in people initiating treatment during chronic infection. In addition, there is little research on its role in persistence of viral variants during long-term antiretroviral therapy (ART). Phylogenetically distinct nef genes (n=82) with varying estimated times of reservoir entry were selected from viral outgrowth variants stimulated from the reservoir of South African women living with HIV who initiated ART during chronic infection (n=16). These nef genes were synthesized and used in a pseudovirus infection assay that measures CD4 and MHC-I downregulation via flow cytometry. Downregulation measures were compared to the size of the replication-competent viral reservoir (RC-VR), estimated by quantitative viral outgrowth assay (QVOA) at 5 years after treatment initiation, as well as proviral survival time. Maximum Nef-mediated MHC-I downregulation was significantly associated with RC-VR size (p=0.034), but this association was not observed for CD4 downregulation. Conversely, we did not find a consistent association between intraparticipant MHC-I or CD4 downregulation and the variant timing of entry into the reservoir. These data support a role for Nef-mediated MHC-I downregulation in determining RC-VR size, but more work is needed to determine Nef’s role in the survival of individual viral variants over time.
Author summary
Understanding the HIV reservoir, including viral determinants of reservoir formation and maintenance, is key for the rational design of cure interventions. In addition, for cure interventions to be equitable, it needs to be broadly applicable. While African women bear the greatest burden of HIV globally, most cure research has been performed in men living in the global North. Our study aims to elucidate attributes of the virus that contribute to reservoir dynamics in South African women on ART. We investigated the ability of the HIV accessory protein Nef to reduce the cell surface levels of two cellular proteins, CD4 and MHC-I, and compared this downregulation capacity with the size of the HIV reservoir and survival of cells infected with a given viral isolate. We found a positive association between an individual’s measured reservoir size and MHC-I downregulation, but not CD4 downregulation. There was little evidence for a survival benefit for stronger Nef MHC-I reduction, but more research is needed on this subject. These data support earlier work and suggest that Nef’s interaction with MHC-I may be a target to restrict the latent reservoir and inform alternate cure strategies.