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

Authors :
Vinicius Vieira
Nicholas Lim
Alveera Singh
Ellen Leitman
Reena Dsouza
Emily Adland
Maximilian Muenchhoff
Julia Roider
Miguel Marin Lopez
Julieta Carabelli
Jennifer Giandhari
Andreas Groll
Pieter Jooste
Julia G. Prado
Christina Thobakgale
Krista Dong
Photini Kiepiela
Andrew J. Prendergast
Gareth Tudor-Williams
John Frater
Bruce D. Walker
Thumbi Ndung’u
Veron Ramsuran
Alasdair Leslie
Henrik N. Kløverpris
Philip Goulder
Source :
JCI Insight, Vol 8, Iss 3 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical investigation, 2023.

Abstract

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.

Subjects

Subjects :
AIDS/HIV
Immunology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
8
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JCI Insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.853642a4fad494d92227bb92d5c7838
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.156049