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Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection

Viremic non-progressors (VNPs), a distinct group of HIV-1-infected individuals, exhibit no signs of disease progression and maintain persistently elevated CD4+ T cell counts for several years despite high viral replication. Comprehensive characterization of homeostatic cellular immune signatures in...

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Autores principales: Singh, Amit Kumar, Salwe, Sukeshani, Padwal, Varsha, Velhal, Shilpa, Sutar, Jyoti, Bhowmick, Shilpa, Mukherjee, Srabani, Nagar, Vidya, Patil, Priya, Patel, Vainav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7066316/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32194543
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.00182
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author Singh, Amit Kumar
Salwe, Sukeshani
Padwal, Varsha
Velhal, Shilpa
Sutar, Jyoti
Bhowmick, Shilpa
Mukherjee, Srabani
Nagar, Vidya
Patil, Priya
Patel, Vainav
author_facet Singh, Amit Kumar
Salwe, Sukeshani
Padwal, Varsha
Velhal, Shilpa
Sutar, Jyoti
Bhowmick, Shilpa
Mukherjee, Srabani
Nagar, Vidya
Patil, Priya
Patel, Vainav
author_sort Singh, Amit Kumar
collection PubMed
description Viremic non-progressors (VNPs), a distinct group of HIV-1-infected individuals, exhibit no signs of disease progression and maintain persistently elevated CD4+ T cell counts for several years despite high viral replication. Comprehensive characterization of homeostatic cellular immune signatures in VNPs can provide unique insights into mechanisms responsible for coping with viral pathogenesis as well as identifying strategies for immune restoration under clinically relevant settings such as antiretroviral therapy (ART) failure. We report a novel homeostatic signature in VNPs, the preservation of the central memory CD4+ T cell (CD4+ T(CM)) compartment. In addition, CD4+ T(CM) preservation was supported by ongoing interleukin-7 (IL-7)-mediated thymic repopulation of naive CD4+ T cells leading to intact CD4+ T cell homeostasis in VNPs. Regulatory T cell (Treg) expansion was found to be a function of preserved CD4+ T cell count and CD4+ T cell activation independent of disease status. However, in light of continual depletion of CD4+ T cell count in progressors but not in VNPs, Tregs appear to be involved in lack of disease progression despite high viremia. In addition to these homeostatic mechanisms resisting CD4+ T cell depletion in VNPs, a relative diminution of terminally differentiated effector subset was observed exclusively in these individuals that might ameliorate consequences of high viral replication. VNPs also shared signatures of impaired CD8+ T cell cytotoxic function with progressors evidenced by increased exhaustion (PD-1 upregulation) and CD127 (IL-7Rα) downregulation contributing to persistent viremia. Thus, the homeostatic immune signatures reported in our study suggest a complex multifactorial mechanism accounting for non-progression in VNPs.
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spelling pubmed-70663162020-03-19 Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection Singh, Amit Kumar Salwe, Sukeshani Padwal, Varsha Velhal, Shilpa Sutar, Jyoti Bhowmick, Shilpa Mukherjee, Srabani Nagar, Vidya Patil, Priya Patel, Vainav Front Immunol Immunology Viremic non-progressors (VNPs), a distinct group of HIV-1-infected individuals, exhibit no signs of disease progression and maintain persistently elevated CD4+ T cell counts for several years despite high viral replication. Comprehensive characterization of homeostatic cellular immune signatures in VNPs can provide unique insights into mechanisms responsible for coping with viral pathogenesis as well as identifying strategies for immune restoration under clinically relevant settings such as antiretroviral therapy (ART) failure. We report a novel homeostatic signature in VNPs, the preservation of the central memory CD4+ T cell (CD4+ T(CM)) compartment. In addition, CD4+ T(CM) preservation was supported by ongoing interleukin-7 (IL-7)-mediated thymic repopulation of naive CD4+ T cells leading to intact CD4+ T cell homeostasis in VNPs. Regulatory T cell (Treg) expansion was found to be a function of preserved CD4+ T cell count and CD4+ T cell activation independent of disease status. However, in light of continual depletion of CD4+ T cell count in progressors but not in VNPs, Tregs appear to be involved in lack of disease progression despite high viremia. In addition to these homeostatic mechanisms resisting CD4+ T cell depletion in VNPs, a relative diminution of terminally differentiated effector subset was observed exclusively in these individuals that might ameliorate consequences of high viral replication. VNPs also shared signatures of impaired CD8+ T cell cytotoxic function with progressors evidenced by increased exhaustion (PD-1 upregulation) and CD127 (IL-7Rα) downregulation contributing to persistent viremia. Thus, the homeostatic immune signatures reported in our study suggest a complex multifactorial mechanism accounting for non-progression in VNPs. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7066316/ /pubmed/32194543 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.00182 Text en Copyright © 2020 Singh, Salwe, Padwal, Velhal, Sutar, Bhowmick, Mukherjee, Nagar, Patil and Patel. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Singh, Amit Kumar
Salwe, Sukeshani
Padwal, Varsha
Velhal, Shilpa
Sutar, Jyoti
Bhowmick, Shilpa
Mukherjee, Srabani
Nagar, Vidya
Patil, Priya
Patel, Vainav
Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title_full Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title_fullStr Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title_full_unstemmed Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title_short Delineation of Homeostatic Immune Signatures Defining Viremic Non-progression in HIV-1 Infection
title_sort delineation of homeostatic immune signatures defining viremic non-progression in hiv-1 infection
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7066316/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32194543
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.00182
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