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Latent HIV Found Seeking Refuge in the Brain

by Dr. Hena Mariam on Jun 19 2023 4:52 PM
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A recent study shows that HIV can go latent in the brain, and stopping therapy can restart the development of infection to AIDS.

Latent HIV Found Seeking Refuge in the Brain
A recent discovery found that HIV may lay latent in the brain and that stopping therapy can restart the development of infection to AIDS.

How Latent HIV can Lead to AIDS

Human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV) inserts a copy of its DNA into human immune cells as part of its life cycle. Some of these newly infected immune cells can subsequently enter an inactive, latent condition for an extended length of time, which is known as HIV latency.
Although current therapies, such as current antiretroviral therapy (ART), can successfully block the virus from replicating further, it cannot eradicate latent HIV. If treatment is ever discontinued, the virus can rebound from latency and lead to AIDS.

Scientists have been searching for where exactly these latent cells are hiding in the body.

Microglial Cells in the Brain: A Reservoir for Latent HIV

The research, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigations, confirms that microglial cells -- which are specialized immune cells with a decade-long lifespan in the brain -- can serve as a stable viral reservoir for latent HIV.

"We now know that microglial cells serve as a persistent brain reservoir," said first author Yuyang Tang, Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases and member of the University of North Carolina HIV Cure Center.

"This had been suspected in the past, but proof in humans was lacking. Our method for isolating viable brain cells provides a new framework for future studies on reservoirs of the central nervous system, and, ultimately, efforts towards the eradication of HIV," Tang added.

Now that the researchers know that latent HIV can take refuge in microglial cells in the brain, they are now considering plans to target this type of reservoir.

Since latent HIV in the brain is radically different from the virus in the periphery, researchers believe that it has adapted special characteristics to replicate in the brain.

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"HIV is very smart," said senior author Guochun Jiang, Assistant Professor in the UNC Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.

"Over time, it has evolved to have epigenetic control of its expression, silencing the virus to hide in the brain from immune clearance. We are starting to unravel the unique mechanism that allows latency of HIV in brain microglia".

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Reference:
  1. Brain microglia serve as a persistent HIV reservoir despite durable antiretroviral therapy - (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10266791/)


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