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CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir

HIV infects long-lived CD4 memory T cells, establishing a latent viral reservoir that necessitates lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART). How this reservoir is formed so quickly after infection remains unclear. We now show the innate inflammatory response to HIV infection results in CCL2 chemokine r...

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Autores principales: Packard, Thomas A., Schwarzer, Roland, Herzig, Eytan, Rao, Deepashri, Luo, Xiaoyu, Egedal, Johanne H., Hsiao, Feng, Widera, Marek, Hultquist, Judd F., Grimmett, Zachary W., Messer, Ronald J., Krogan, Nevan J., Deeks, Steven G., Roan, Nadia R., Dittmer, Ulf, Hasenkrug, Kim J., Greene, Warner C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9600577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36073812
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01891-22
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author Packard, Thomas A.
Schwarzer, Roland
Herzig, Eytan
Rao, Deepashri
Luo, Xiaoyu
Egedal, Johanne H.
Hsiao, Feng
Widera, Marek
Hultquist, Judd F.
Grimmett, Zachary W.
Messer, Ronald J.
Krogan, Nevan J.
Deeks, Steven G.
Roan, Nadia R.
Dittmer, Ulf
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Greene, Warner C.
author_facet Packard, Thomas A.
Schwarzer, Roland
Herzig, Eytan
Rao, Deepashri
Luo, Xiaoyu
Egedal, Johanne H.
Hsiao, Feng
Widera, Marek
Hultquist, Judd F.
Grimmett, Zachary W.
Messer, Ronald J.
Krogan, Nevan J.
Deeks, Steven G.
Roan, Nadia R.
Dittmer, Ulf
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Greene, Warner C.
author_sort Packard, Thomas A.
collection PubMed
description HIV infects long-lived CD4 memory T cells, establishing a latent viral reservoir that necessitates lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART). How this reservoir is formed so quickly after infection remains unclear. We now show the innate inflammatory response to HIV infection results in CCL2 chemokine release, leading to recruitment of cells expressing the CCR2 receptor, including a subset of central memory CD4 T cells. Supporting a role for the CCL2/CCR2 axis in rapid reservoir formation, we find (i) treatment of humanized mice with anti-CCL2 antibodies during early HIV infection decreases reservoir seeding and preserves CCR2/5(+) cells and (ii) CCR2/5(+) cells from the blood of HIV-infected individuals on long-term ART contain significantly more integrated provirus than CCR2/5-negative memory or naive cells. Together, these studies support a model where the host’s innate inflammatory response to HIV infection, including CCL2 production, leads to the recruitment of CCR2/5(+) central memory CD4 T cells to zones of virus-associated inflammation, likely contributing to rapid formation of the latent HIV reservoir.
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spelling pubmed-96005772022-10-27 CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir Packard, Thomas A. Schwarzer, Roland Herzig, Eytan Rao, Deepashri Luo, Xiaoyu Egedal, Johanne H. Hsiao, Feng Widera, Marek Hultquist, Judd F. Grimmett, Zachary W. Messer, Ronald J. Krogan, Nevan J. Deeks, Steven G. Roan, Nadia R. Dittmer, Ulf Hasenkrug, Kim J. Greene, Warner C. mBio Research Article HIV infects long-lived CD4 memory T cells, establishing a latent viral reservoir that necessitates lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART). How this reservoir is formed so quickly after infection remains unclear. We now show the innate inflammatory response to HIV infection results in CCL2 chemokine release, leading to recruitment of cells expressing the CCR2 receptor, including a subset of central memory CD4 T cells. Supporting a role for the CCL2/CCR2 axis in rapid reservoir formation, we find (i) treatment of humanized mice with anti-CCL2 antibodies during early HIV infection decreases reservoir seeding and preserves CCR2/5(+) cells and (ii) CCR2/5(+) cells from the blood of HIV-infected individuals on long-term ART contain significantly more integrated provirus than CCR2/5-negative memory or naive cells. Together, these studies support a model where the host’s innate inflammatory response to HIV infection, including CCL2 production, leads to the recruitment of CCR2/5(+) central memory CD4 T cells to zones of virus-associated inflammation, likely contributing to rapid formation of the latent HIV reservoir. American Society for Microbiology 2022-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9600577/ /pubmed/36073812 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01891-22 Text en https://doi.org/10.1128/AuthorWarrantyLicense.v1This is a work of the U.S. Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Foreign copyrights may apply.
spellingShingle Research Article
Packard, Thomas A.
Schwarzer, Roland
Herzig, Eytan
Rao, Deepashri
Luo, Xiaoyu
Egedal, Johanne H.
Hsiao, Feng
Widera, Marek
Hultquist, Judd F.
Grimmett, Zachary W.
Messer, Ronald J.
Krogan, Nevan J.
Deeks, Steven G.
Roan, Nadia R.
Dittmer, Ulf
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Greene, Warner C.
CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title_full CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title_fullStr CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title_full_unstemmed CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title_short CCL2: a Chemokine Potentially Promoting Early Seeding of the Latent HIV Reservoir
title_sort ccl2: a chemokine potentially promoting early seeding of the latent hiv reservoir
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9600577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36073812
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01891-22
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