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Aberrant DNA methylation of genes regulating CD4+ T cell HIV-1 reservoir in women with HIV
Xu, K., Zhang, X., Asam, K., Quach, B. C., Page, G. P., Konkle-Parker, D., Martinez, C., Lahiri, C. D., Topper, E. F., Cohen, M. H., Kassaye, S. G., DeHovitz, J., Kuniholm, M. H., Archin, N. M., Valizadeh, A., Tien, P. C., Marconi, V. C., Hancock, D. B., Johnson, E. O., & Aouizerat, B. E. (2025). Aberrant DNA methylation of genes regulating CD4+ T cell HIV-1 reservoir in women with HIV. Clinical and Translational Medicine, 15(3), e70267. Article e70267. https://doi.org/10.1002/ctm2.70267
BACKGROUND: The HIV-1 reservoir in CD4+ T cells (HRCD4) pose a major challenge to curing HIV, with many of its mechanisms still unclear. HIV-1 DNA integration and immune responses may alter the host's epigenetic landscape, potentially silencing HIV-1 replication.
METHODS: This study used bisulphite capture DNA methylation sequencing in CD4+ T cells from the blood of 427 virally suppressed women with HIV to identify differentially methylated sites and regions associated with HRCD4.
RESULTS: The average total HRCD4 size was 1409 copies per million cells, with most proviruses defective and only a small proportion intact. The study identified 245 differentially methylated CpG sites and 85 regions linked to HRCD4 size, with 52% of significant sites in intronic regions. Genes associated with HRCD4 were involved in viral replication, HIV-1 latency and cell growth and apoptosis. HRCD4 size was inversely related to DNA methylation of interferon signalling genes and positively associated with methylation at known HIV-1 integration sites. HRCD4-associated genes were enriched on the pathways related to immune defence, transcription repression and host-virus interactions.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that HIV-1 reservoir is linked to aberrant DNA methylation in CD4+ T cells, offering new insights into epigenetic mechanisms of HIV-1 latency and potential molecular targets for eradication strategies.
KEY POINTS: Study involved 427 women with HIV. Identified 245 aberrant DNA methylation sites and 85 methylation regions in CD4+ T cells linked to the HIV-1 reservoir. Highlighted genes are involved in viral replication, immune defence, and host genome integration. Findings suggest potential molecular targets for eradication strategies.