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Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers

Elite and viremic HIV controllers are able to control their HIV infection and maintain undetectable or low-level viremia in the absence of antiretroviral treatment. Despite extensive studies, the immune factors responsible for such exclusive control remain poorly defined. We identified a cohort of 1...

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Autores principales: Rosás-Umbert, Miriam, Llano, Anuska, Bellido, Rocío, Olvera, Alex, Ruiz-Riol, Marta, Rocafort, Muntsa, Fernández, Marco A., Cobarsi, Patricia, Crespo, Manel, Dorrell, Lucy, del Romero, Jorge, Alcami, José, Paredes, Roger, Brander, Christian, Mothe, Beatriz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6363998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30487276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01436-18
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author Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Llano, Anuska
Bellido, Rocío
Olvera, Alex
Ruiz-Riol, Marta
Rocafort, Muntsa
Fernández, Marco A.
Cobarsi, Patricia
Crespo, Manel
Dorrell, Lucy
del Romero, Jorge
Alcami, José
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
Mothe, Beatriz
author_facet Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Llano, Anuska
Bellido, Rocío
Olvera, Alex
Ruiz-Riol, Marta
Rocafort, Muntsa
Fernández, Marco A.
Cobarsi, Patricia
Crespo, Manel
Dorrell, Lucy
del Romero, Jorge
Alcami, José
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
Mothe, Beatriz
author_sort Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
collection PubMed
description Elite and viremic HIV controllers are able to control their HIV infection and maintain undetectable or low-level viremia in the absence of antiretroviral treatment. Despite extensive studies, the immune factors responsible for such exclusive control remain poorly defined. We identified a cohort of 14 HIV controllers that suffered an abrupt loss of HIV control (LoC) to investigate possible mechanisms and virological and immunological events related to the sudden loss of control. The in-depth analysis of these subjects involved the study of cell tropism of circulating virus, evidence for HIV superinfection, cellular immune responses to HIV, as well as an examination of viral adaptation to host immunity by Gag sequencing. Our data demonstrate that a poor capacity of T cells to mediate in vitro viral suppression, even in the context of protective HLA alleles, predicts a loss of viral control. In addition, the data suggest that inefficient viral control may be explained by an increase of CD8 T-cell activation and exhaustion before LoC. Furthermore, we detected a switch from C5- to X4-tropic viruses in 4 individuals after loss of control, suggesting that tropism shift might also contribute to disease progression in HIV controllers. The significantly reduced inhibition of in vitro viral replication and increased expression of activation and exhaustion markers preceding the abrupt loss of viral control may help identify untreated HIV controllers that are at risk of losing control and may offer a useful tool for monitoring individuals during treatment interruption phases in therapeutic vaccine trials. IMPORTANCE A few individuals can control HIV infection without the need for antiretroviral treatment and are referred to as HIV controllers. We have studied HIV controllers who suddenly lose this ability and present with high in vivo viral replication and decays in their CD4(+) T-cell counts to identify potential immune and virological factors that were responsible for initial virus control. We identify in vitro-determined reductions in the ability of CD8 T cells to suppress viral control and the presence of PD-1-expressing CD8(+) T cells with a naive immune phenotype as potential predictors of in vivo loss of virus control. The findings could be important for the clinical management of HIV controller individuals, and it may offer an important tool to anticipate viral rebound in individuals in clinical studies that include combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) treatment interruptions and which, if not treated quickly, could pose a significant risk to the trial participants.
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spelling pubmed-63639982019-02-22 Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers Rosás-Umbert, Miriam Llano, Anuska Bellido, Rocío Olvera, Alex Ruiz-Riol, Marta Rocafort, Muntsa Fernández, Marco A. Cobarsi, Patricia Crespo, Manel Dorrell, Lucy del Romero, Jorge Alcami, José Paredes, Roger Brander, Christian Mothe, Beatriz J Virol Pathogenesis and Immunity Elite and viremic HIV controllers are able to control their HIV infection and maintain undetectable or low-level viremia in the absence of antiretroviral treatment. Despite extensive studies, the immune factors responsible for such exclusive control remain poorly defined. We identified a cohort of 14 HIV controllers that suffered an abrupt loss of HIV control (LoC) to investigate possible mechanisms and virological and immunological events related to the sudden loss of control. The in-depth analysis of these subjects involved the study of cell tropism of circulating virus, evidence for HIV superinfection, cellular immune responses to HIV, as well as an examination of viral adaptation to host immunity by Gag sequencing. Our data demonstrate that a poor capacity of T cells to mediate in vitro viral suppression, even in the context of protective HLA alleles, predicts a loss of viral control. In addition, the data suggest that inefficient viral control may be explained by an increase of CD8 T-cell activation and exhaustion before LoC. Furthermore, we detected a switch from C5- to X4-tropic viruses in 4 individuals after loss of control, suggesting that tropism shift might also contribute to disease progression in HIV controllers. The significantly reduced inhibition of in vitro viral replication and increased expression of activation and exhaustion markers preceding the abrupt loss of viral control may help identify untreated HIV controllers that are at risk of losing control and may offer a useful tool for monitoring individuals during treatment interruption phases in therapeutic vaccine trials. IMPORTANCE A few individuals can control HIV infection without the need for antiretroviral treatment and are referred to as HIV controllers. We have studied HIV controllers who suddenly lose this ability and present with high in vivo viral replication and decays in their CD4(+) T-cell counts to identify potential immune and virological factors that were responsible for initial virus control. We identify in vitro-determined reductions in the ability of CD8 T cells to suppress viral control and the presence of PD-1-expressing CD8(+) T cells with a naive immune phenotype as potential predictors of in vivo loss of virus control. The findings could be important for the clinical management of HIV controller individuals, and it may offer an important tool to anticipate viral rebound in individuals in clinical studies that include combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) treatment interruptions and which, if not treated quickly, could pose a significant risk to the trial participants. American Society for Microbiology 2019-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6363998/ /pubmed/30487276 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01436-18 Text en Copyright © 2019 Rosás-Umbert et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Pathogenesis and Immunity
Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Llano, Anuska
Bellido, Rocío
Olvera, Alex
Ruiz-Riol, Marta
Rocafort, Muntsa
Fernández, Marco A.
Cobarsi, Patricia
Crespo, Manel
Dorrell, Lucy
del Romero, Jorge
Alcami, José
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
Mothe, Beatriz
Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title_full Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title_fullStr Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title_full_unstemmed Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title_short Mechanisms of Abrupt Loss of Virus Control in a Cohort of Previous HIV Controllers
title_sort mechanisms of abrupt loss of virus control in a cohort of previous hiv controllers
topic Pathogenesis and Immunity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6363998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30487276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01436-18
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