Division of Immunology, Department of Pathology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Cape Town, South Africa.
J Virol. 2020 Jun 1;94(12). doi: 10.1128/JVI.00229-20.
Compartmentalization of HIV-1 between the systemic circulation and the male genital tract may have a substantial impact on which viruses are available for sexual transmission to new hosts. We studied compartmentalization and clonal amplification of HIV-1 populations between the blood and the genital tract from 10 antiretroviral-naive men using Illumina MiSeq with a PrimerID approach. We found evidence of some degree of compartmentalization in every study participant, unlike previous studies, which collectively showed that only ∼50% of analyzed individuals exhibited compartmentalization of HIV-1 lineages between the male genital tract (MGT) and blood. Using down-sampling simulations, we determined that this disparity can be explained by differences in sampling depth in that had we sequenced to a lower depth, we would also have found compartmentalization in only ∼50% of the study participants. For most study participants, phylogenetic trees were rooted in blood, suggesting that the male genital tract reservoir is seeded by incoming variants from the blood. Clonal amplification was observed in all study participants and was a characteristic of both blood and semen viral populations. We also show evidence for independent viral replication in the genital tract in the individual with the most severely compartmentalized HIV-1 populations. The degree of clonal amplification was not obviously associated with the extent of compartmentalization. We were also unable to detect any association between history of sexually transmitted infections and level of HIV-1 compartmentalization. Overall, our findings contribute to a better understanding of the dynamics that affect the composition of virus populations that are available for transmission. Within an individual living with HIV-1, factors that restrict the movement of HIV-1 between different compartments-such as between the blood and the male genital tract-could strongly influence which viruses reach sites in the body from which they can be transmitted. Using deep sequencing, we found strong evidence of restricted HIV-1 movements between the blood and genital tract in all 10 men that we studied. We additionally found that neither the degree to which particular genetic variants of HIV-1 proliferate (in blood or genital tract) nor an individual's history of sexually transmitted infections detectably influenced the degree to which virus movements were restricted between the blood and genital tract. Last, we show evidence that viral replication gave rise to a large clonal amplification in semen in a donor with highly compartmentalized HIV-1 populations, raising the possibility that differential selection of HIV-1 variants in the genital tract may occur.
HIV-1 在全身循环系统和男性生殖道之间的分隔可能对可用于性传播给新宿主的病毒有重大影响。我们使用 Illumina MiSeq 与 PrimerID 方法研究了 10 名未接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的男性的血液和生殖道之间的 HIV-1 群体的分隔和克隆扩增。与之前的研究不同,我们发现每个研究参与者都存在某种程度的分隔,而之前的研究表明,只有约 50%的分析个体表现出 HIV-1 谱系在男性生殖道(MGT)和血液之间的分隔。通过降采样模拟,我们确定这种差异可以通过采样深度的差异来解释,因为如果我们测序到较低的深度,我们也会发现只有约 50%的研究参与者存在分隔。对于大多数研究参与者,系统发育树以血液为根,表明男性生殖道储库是由血液中的传入变体播种的。克隆扩增在所有研究参与者中均有观察到,是血液和精液病毒群体的特征。我们还提供了个体中生殖道内独立病毒复制的证据,该个体的 HIV-1 群体分隔最严重。克隆扩增的程度与分隔的程度没有明显关联。我们也未能检测到性传播感染史与 HIV-1 分隔程度之间的任何关联。总的来说,我们的研究结果有助于更好地理解影响可用于传播的病毒群体组成的动态。在感染 HIV-1 的个体中,限制 HIV-1 在不同隔室之间移动的因素(例如血液和男性生殖道之间)可能会强烈影响哪些病毒到达体内可传播的部位。通过深度测序,我们在我们研究的 10 名男性中均发现了血液和生殖道之间 HIV-1 移动受限的有力证据。我们还发现,HIV-1 特定遗传变体在血液或生殖道中增殖的程度(无论在血液或生殖道中)以及个体的性传播感染史都不能检测到影响病毒在血液和生殖道之间移动的程度。最后,我们提供了证据表明,在高度分隔的 HIV-1 群体供体的精液中,病毒复制导致了大量的克隆扩增,这增加了生殖道中 HIV-1 变体的差异选择可能发生的可能性。