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Effective Treatment of Patients Experiencing Primary, Acute HIV Infection Decreases Exhausted/Activated CD4+ T Cells and CD8+ T Memory Stem Cells.

Authors :
Lo Tartaro, Domenico
Camiro-Zúñiga, Antonio
Nasi, Milena
De Biasi, Sara
Najera-Avila, Marco A.
Jaramillo-Jante, Maria Del Rocio
Gibellini, Lara
Pinti, Marcello
Neroni, Anita
Mussini, Cristina
Soto-Ramírez, Luis E.
Calva, Juan J.
Belaunzarán-Zamudio, Francisco
Crabtree-Ramirez, Brenda
Hernández-Leon, Christian
Mosqueda-Gómez, Juan L.
Navarro-Álvarez, Samuel
Perez-Patrigeon, Santiago
Cossarizza, Andrea
Source :
Cells (2073-4409); Aug2022, Vol. 11 Issue 15, p2307-2307, 15p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Several studies have identified main changes in T- and B-lymphocyte subsets during chronic HIV infection, but few data exist on how these subsets behave during the initial phase of HIV infection. We enrolled 22 HIV-infected patients during the acute stage of infection before the initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART). Patients had blood samples drawn previous to ART initiation (T0), and at 2 (T1) and 12 (T2) months after ART initiation. We quantified cellular HIV-DNA content in sorted naïve and effector memory CD4 T cells and identified the main subsets of T- and B-lymphocytes using an 18-parameter flow cytometry panel. We identified correlations between the patients' clinical and immunological data using PCA. Effective HIV treatment reduces integrated HIV DNA in effector memory T cells after 12 months (T2) of ART. The main changes in CD4+ T cells occurred at T2, with a reduction of activated memory, cytolytic and activated/exhausted stem cell memory T (T<subscript>SCM</subscript>) cells. Changes were present among CD8+ T cells since T1, with a reduction of several activated subsets, including activated/exhausted T<subscript>SCM</subscript>. At T2 a reduction of plasmablasts and exhausted B cells was also observed. A negative correlation was found between the total CD4+ T-cell count and IgM-negative plasmablasts. In patients initiating ART immediately following acute/early HIV infection, the fine analysis of T- and B-cell subsets has allowed us to identify and follow main modifications due to effective treatment, and to identify significant changes in CD4+ and CD8+ T memory stem cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734409
Volume :
11
Issue :
15
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cells (2073-4409)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158523408
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11152307