Background: We address the key emerging question of whether Lin(-)/CD34(+) hematopoietic precursor cells (HPCs) represent an important latent reservoir of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) during long-term suppressive therapy.
Methods: To estimate the frequency of HIV-1 infection in bone marrow, we sorted Lin(-)/CD34(+) HPCs and 3 other cell types (Lin(-)/CD34(-), Lin(-)/CD4(+), and Lin(+)/CD4(+)) from 8 patients who had undetectable viral loads for 3-12 years. Using a single-proviral sequencing method, we extracted, amplified, and sequenced multiple single HIV-1 DNA molecules from these cells and memory CD4(+) T cells from contemporaneous peripheral blood samples.
Results: We analyzed 100,000-870,000 bone marrow Lin(-)/CD34(+) HPCs from the 8 patients and found no HIV-1 DNA. We did isolate HIV-1 DNA from their bone marrow Lin(+)/CD4(+) cells that was genetically similar to HIV-1 DNA from lymphoid cells located in the peripheral blood, indicating an exchange of infected cells between these compartments.
Conclusions: The absence of infected HPCs provides strong evidence that the HIV-1 infection frequency of Lin(-)/CD34(+) HPCs from bone marrow, if it occurred, was <.003% (highest upper 95% confidence interval) in all 8 patients. These results strongly suggest that Lin(-)/CD34(+) HPCs in bone marrow are not a source of persistent HIV-1 in patients on long-term suppressive therapy.