Resting regulatory CD4 T cells: a site of HIV persistence in patients on long-term effective antiretroviral therapy

In HIV-infected patients on long-term HAART, virus persistence in resting long-lived CD4 T cells is a major barrier to curing the infection. Cell quiescence, by favouring HIV latency, reduces the risk of recognition and cell destruction by cytotoxic lymphocytes. Several cell-activation-based approac...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2008-10, Vol.3 (10), p.e3305-e3305
Hauptverfasser: Tran, Tu-Anh, de Goër de Herve, Marie-Ghislaine, Hendel-Chavez, Houria, Dembele, Bamory, Le Névot, Emilie, Abbed, Karim, Pallier, Coralie, Goujard, Cécile, Gasnault, Jacques, Delfraissy, Jean-François, Balazuc, Anne-Marie, Taoufik, Yassine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In HIV-infected patients on long-term HAART, virus persistence in resting long-lived CD4 T cells is a major barrier to curing the infection. Cell quiescence, by favouring HIV latency, reduces the risk of recognition and cell destruction by cytotoxic lymphocytes. Several cell-activation-based approaches have been proposed to disrupt cell quiescence and then virus latency, but these approaches have not eradicated the virus. CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a CD4+ T-cell subset with particular activation properties. We investigated the role of these cells in virus persistence in patients on long-term HAART. We found evidence of infection of resting Tregs (HLADR(-)CD69(-)CD25(hi)FoxP3+CD4+ T cells) purified from patients on prolonged HAART. HIV DNA harbouring cells appear more abundant in the Treg subset than in non-Tregs. The half-life of the Treg reservoir was estimated at 20 months. Since Tregs from patients on prolonged HAART showed hyporesponsiveness to cell activation and inhibition of HIV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte-related functions upon activation, therapeutics targeting cell quiescence to induce virus expression may not be appropriate for purging the Treg reservoir. Our results identify Tregs as a particular compartment within the latent reservoir that may require a specific approach for its purging.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0003305