HIV VIS Detail Information

> This page shows VIS [4002813] detail information, including site information (chromosome, GRCh38 location, disease, sample, etc) and literature information.


Site Information
DVID 4002813
VISID TVIS30014178
Chromosome chr2
GRCh38 Location 95951397
Disease HIV Infections   Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome  
Sample PBMC
Virus Reference Genome Not given
Target Gene ANKRD36C  
Literature Information
PubMed PMID 17262715
Year 2007 Mar 1;195(5):716-25
Journal The Journal of infectious diseases
Title Recurrent HIV-1 integration at the BACH2 locus in resting CD4+ T cell populations during effective highly active antiretroviral therapy.
Author Ikeda T,Shibata J,Yoshimura K,Koito A,Matsushita S
Evidence The persistence of latent human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has been considered one of the major obstacles for eradication of the virus in infected individuals receiving successful antiretroviral therapy. To determine the contribution of integration sites to viral latency within clinical settings, an inverse polymerase chain reaction method was used to analyze integration sites in CD4(+) T cells from patients showing long-term undetectable plasma viral RNA. Of 457 sites identified in 7 patients, almost all (96%) resided within transcriptional units, usually in introns of the human genome. Studies of 18 genes in which HIV-1 integrates found them to be actively expressed in resting CD4(+) T cells. On the other hand, integration sites in the alpha satellite region was also identified in some patients, albeit at low frequency. Of particular interest, HIV-1-infected cells with multiple identical integration sites were detected in longitudinal analysis of samples from 3 patients, suggesting that these cells persist for long periods and that clonal expansion may occur. Furthermore, strong integration clusters in the BACH2 gene were observed in 2 patients (31% in patient 1 and 5% in patient 3). Our findings not only raise the possibility of biased target-site integration but also provide mechanistic insights into the long-term persistence of HIV-1.

Contents
Description
  • Site Information
Detail information of site [4002813]
  • Literature Information
The details of literature that this site is associated with.