Slow progression of pediatric HIV associates with early CD8+ T cell PD-1 expression and a stem-like phenotype

HIV nonprogression despite persistent viremia is rare among adults who are naive to antiretroviral therapy (ART) but relatively common among ART-naive children. Previous studies indicate that ART-naive pediatric slow progressors (PSPs) adopt immune evasion strategies similar to those described in na...

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Veröffentlicht in:JCI insight 2023-02, Vol.8 (3)
Hauptverfasser: Vieira, Vinicius, Lim, Nicholas, Singh, Alveera, Leitman, Ellen, Dsouza, Reena, Adland, Emily, Muenchhoff, Maximilian, Roider, Julia, Marin Lopez, Miguel, Carabelli, Julieta, Giandhari, Jennifer, Groll, Andreas, Jooste, Pieter, Prado, Julia G, Thobakgale, Christina, Dong, Krista, Kiepiela, Photini, Prendergast, Andrew J, Tudor-Williams, Gareth, Frater, John, Walker, Bruce D, Ndung'u, Thumbi, Ramsuran, Veron, Leslie, Alasdair, Kløverpris, Henrik N, Goulder, Philip
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:HIV nonprogression despite persistent viremia is rare among adults who are naive to antiretroviral therapy (ART) but relatively common among ART-naive children. Previous studies indicate that ART-naive pediatric slow progressors (PSPs) adopt immune evasion strategies similar to those described in natural hosts of SIV. However, the mechanisms underlying this immunophenotype are not well understood. In a cohort of early-treated infants who underwent analytical treatment interruption (ATI) after 12 months of ART, expression of PD-1 on CD8+ T cells immediately before ATI was the main predictor of slow progression during ATI. PD-1+CD8+ T cell frequency was also negatively correlated with CCR5 and HLA-DR expression on CD4+ T cells and predicted stronger HIV-specific T lymphocyte responses. In the CD8+ T cell compartment of PSPs, we identified an enrichment of stem-like TCF-1+PD-1+ memory cells, whereas pediatric progressors and viremic adults had a terminally exhausted PD-1+CD39+ population. TCF-1+PD-1+ expression on CD8+ T cells was associated with higher proliferative activity and stronger Gag-specific effector functionality. These data prompted the hypothesis that the proliferative burst potential of stem-like HIV-specific cytotoxic cells could be exploited in therapeutic strategies to boost the antiviral response and facilitate remission in infants who received early ART with a preserved and nonexhausted T cell compartment.
ISSN:2379-3708
2379-3708
DOI:10.1172/jci.insight.156049