Conclusions
Our investigation of the spatial distributions of drug, virus and target cells underscores the influence of location and microenvironment within LN, where a small population of T cells may remain vulnerable to infection and low-level viral replication during suppressive ART.
Methods
Between December 2014 and April 2017, RT-SHIV infected (SHIV+; N = 6) and healthy (SHIV-; N = 6) male rhesus macaques received two selected four-drug combinations of six ARVs over 10 days to attain steady-state conditions. Serial cryosections of axillary LN were analysed by a multimodal imaging approach that combined mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) for ARV disposition, RNAscope in situ hybridization for viral RNA (vRNA) and immunohistochemistry for CD4+ T cell and collagen expression. Spatial relationships across these four imaging domains were investigated by nearest neighbour search on co-registered images using MATLAB.
Results
Through MSI, ARV-dependent, heterogeneous concentrations were observed in different morphological LN regions, such as the follicles and medullary sinuses. After 5-6 weeks of infection, more limited ARV penetration into LN tissue relative to the blood marker heme was found in SHIV+ animals (SHIV+: 0.7 [0.2-1.4] mm; SHIV-: 1.3 [0.5-1.7] mm), suggesting alterations in the microcirculation. However, we found no detectable increase in collagen deposition. Regimen-wide maps of composite ARV distribution indicated that up to 27% of SHIV+ LN tissue area was not exposed to detectable ARVs. Regions associated with B cell follicles had median 1.15 [0.94-2.69] -fold reduction in areas with measurable drug, though differences were only statistically significant for tenofovir (p = 0.03). Median co-localization of drug with CD4+ target cells and vRNA varied widely by ARV (5.1-100%), but nearest neighbour analysis indicated that up to 10% of target cells and cell-associated vRNA were not directly contiguous to at least one drug at concentrations greater than the IC50 value. Conclusions: Our investigation of the spatial distributions of drug, virus and target cells underscores the influence of location and microenvironment within LN, where a small population of T cells may remain vulnerable to infection and low-level viral replication during suppressive ART.
