A daisy chain of inferences: the role of single-cell and single-genome proviral sequencing in characterizing HIV-1 reservoirs.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Understanding and targeting the HIV reservoir requires navigating a hierarchy of inferential assays. Quantitative viral outgrowth assays, FLIP-seq, and intact proviral DNA assays (IPDA) - though methodologically distinct - are all fundamentally single-cell technologies. Each relies on limiting dilution to isolate and interrogate individual proviral genomes derived from single infected cells, offering high-resolution proxies for the outcome of greatest interest: replication competence and the risk of viral rebound. Rather than providing direct measurements, these assays infer one another in a nested framework. This review highlights the importance of critically interpreting assay outputs within this chain of inference to guide cure-directed strategies and reservoir quantification. RECENT FINDINGS: Recent studies emphasize the complexity and limitations of current assays measuring HIV-1 reservoirs. Key themes include reliance on bioinformatics definitions of genome-intactness to infer replication competence, alongside significant limitations due to viral diversity, PCR amplification length biases, and definitional inconsistencies. Modified assays like subtype-specific IPDA aim to address these issues. SUMMARY: Standardized, subtype-specific single-cell methodologies are crucial for accurate HIV reservoir characterization. Future research should integrate large-scale sequencing with replication competence validation, and should refine bioinformatics approaches to enhance predictive accuracy. Enhanced assay precision is essential to inform effective HIV cure strategies.