BACH2-driven tissue resident memory programs promote HIV-1 persistence

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SUMMARY Transcription repressor BACH2 redirects short-lived terminally differentiated effector into long-lived memory cells. We postulate that BACH2-mediated long-lived memory programs promote HIV-1 persistence in gut CD4+ T cells. We coupled single-cell DOGMA-seq and TREK-seq to capture chromatin accessibility, transcriptome, surface proteins, T cell receptor, HIV-1 DNA and HIV-1 RNA in 100,744 gut T cells from ten aviremic HIV-1+ individuals and five HIV-1– donors. BACH2 was the leading transcription factor that shaped gut tissue resident memory T cells (TRMs) into long-lived memory with restrained interferon-induced effector function. We found that HIV-1-infected cells were enriched in TRMs (80.8%). HIV-1-infected cells had increased BACH2 transcription factor accessibility, TRM (CD49a, CD69, CD103) and survival (IL7R) gene expression, and Th17 polarization (RORC, CCR6). In vitro gut CD4+ T cell infection revealed preferential infection and persistence of HIV-1 in CCR6+ TRMs. Overall, we found BACH2-driven TRM program promotes HIV-1 persistence and BACH2 as a new therapeutic target. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00