Abstract
A latent pool of HIV-1 is established early in memory CD4+ T lymphocytes and persists during antiretroviral therapy. Also, viral replication may continue in subjects despite undetectable viremia. However, it remains unclear whether this residual replication results in any significant sequence evolution. We were therefore interested in studying the viral evolution and HIV-1 DNA dynamics in subjects with primary infection receiving or not receiving early potent antiretroviral therapy. In 16 subjects, HIV-1 DNA load was monitored from 1 to 23 days, up to 1253 days, after onset of symptoms. Extensive sequential cloning and sequence analysis of the V3 region was performed in four subjects. In the treated subjects a continuous decline in the proviral load was found, corresponding to a half-life of about 6 months. As expected in newly infected individuals the founder virus populations showed high intrasubject sequence similarity. Also, a limited increase in the viral divergence was detected during the first 6 months in three treated subjects. Thereafter, no significant sequence changes were found despite analysis of a large number of clones. Our data thus suggest that early and successful therapy in compliant subjects with primary HIV-1 infection results in a highly restricted viral evolution and a decline in the proviral load close to the decay rate of human memory T lymphocytes.
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