RETRACTED ARTICLE: Dramatic HIV DNA degradation associated with spontaneous HIV suppression and disease-free outcome in a young seropositive woman following her infection

Strategies to cure HIV-infected patients by virus-targeting drugs have failed to date. We identified a HIV-1-seropositive woman who spontaneously suppressed HIV replication and had normal CD4-cell counts, no HIV-disease, no replication-competent virus and no cell HIV DNA detected with a routine assa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2020-02, Vol.10 (1), p.2548, Article 2548
Hauptverfasser: Colson, Philippe, Dhiver, Catherine, Tamalet, Catherine, Delerce, Jeremy, Glazunova, Olga O., Gaudin, Maxime, Levasseur, Anthony, Raoult, Didier
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container_title Scientific reports
container_volume 10
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Glazunova, Olga O.
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Raoult, Didier
description Strategies to cure HIV-infected patients by virus-targeting drugs have failed to date. We identified a HIV-1-seropositive woman who spontaneously suppressed HIV replication and had normal CD4-cell counts, no HIV-disease, no replication-competent virus and no cell HIV DNA detected with a routine assay. We suspected that dramatic HIV DNA degradation occurred post-infection. We performed multiple nested-PCRs followed by Sanger sequencing and applied a multiplex-PCR approach. Furthermore, we implemented a new technique based on two hybridization steps on beads prior to next-generation sequencing that removed human DNA then retrieved integrated HIV sequences with HIV-specific probes. We assembled ≈45% of the HIV genome and further analyzed the G-to-A mutations putatively generated by cellular APOBEC3 enzymes that can change tryptophan codons into stop codons. We found more G-to-A mutations in the HIV DNA from the woman than in that of her transmitting partner. Moreover, 74% of the tryptophan codons were changed to stop codons (25%) or were deleted as a possible consequence of gene inactivation. Finally, we found that this woman’s cells remained HIV-susceptible in vitro . Our findings show that she does not exhibit innate HIV-resistance but may have been cured of it by extrinsic factors, a plausible candidate for which is the gut microbiota.
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subjects 45/23
45/77
631/326/596/1787
692/420/254
Deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA
Humanities and Social Sciences
Inactivation
multidisciplinary
Mutation
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
title RETRACTED ARTICLE: Dramatic HIV DNA degradation associated with spontaneous HIV suppression and disease-free outcome in a young seropositive woman following her infection
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