Background: HIV-associated immunodeficiency is related to loss of CD4+T cells. This mechanism does not explain certain manifestations of HIV disease, such as immunodeficiency events in patients with greater than 500 CD4+T cells/μL. CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+T cells are regulatory T (Treg) lymphocytes that are highly concentrated within the tumor microenvironment and never analyzed in the circulation of HIV-infected patients. Objectives: We sought to analyze the frequency of CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells in the circulation of HIV-infected patients. Methods: The frequency of circulating CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells was analyzed and correlated with viral load and CD4+T-cell counts/percentages in 93 HIV-1-infected patients subdivided as follows: naive (n = 63), elite controllers (n = 19), long-term nonprogressors (n = 7), and HIV-infected patients affected by tumor (n = 4). The same analyses were performed in HIV-negative patients with cancer (n = 53), hepatitis C virus-infected patients (n = 17), and healthy donors (n = 173). Results: HIV-infected patients had increased circulating levels of functional CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells. These cells showed antigen specificity against HIV proteins. Their frequency after antiretroviral therapy (ART) correlated with HIV viremia, CD4+T-cell counts, and immune activation markers, suggesting their pathogenic involvement in AIDS- or non-AIDS-related complications. Their increase after initiation of ART heralded a lack of virologic or clinical response, and hence their monitoring is clinically relevant. Conclusion: HIV infection induces remarkable expansion of CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells, the frequency of which correlates with both clinical disease and signs of chronic immune cell activation. Monitoring their frequency in the circulation is a new marker of response to ART when effects on viremia and clinical response are not met.

CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+regulatory T-cell expansion: A new possible pathogenic mechanism for HIV infection?

Negrini, Simone;
2018-01-01

Abstract

Background: HIV-associated immunodeficiency is related to loss of CD4+T cells. This mechanism does not explain certain manifestations of HIV disease, such as immunodeficiency events in patients with greater than 500 CD4+T cells/μL. CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+T cells are regulatory T (Treg) lymphocytes that are highly concentrated within the tumor microenvironment and never analyzed in the circulation of HIV-infected patients. Objectives: We sought to analyze the frequency of CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells in the circulation of HIV-infected patients. Methods: The frequency of circulating CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells was analyzed and correlated with viral load and CD4+T-cell counts/percentages in 93 HIV-1-infected patients subdivided as follows: naive (n = 63), elite controllers (n = 19), long-term nonprogressors (n = 7), and HIV-infected patients affected by tumor (n = 4). The same analyses were performed in HIV-negative patients with cancer (n = 53), hepatitis C virus-infected patients (n = 17), and healthy donors (n = 173). Results: HIV-infected patients had increased circulating levels of functional CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells. These cells showed antigen specificity against HIV proteins. Their frequency after antiretroviral therapy (ART) correlated with HIV viremia, CD4+T-cell counts, and immune activation markers, suggesting their pathogenic involvement in AIDS- or non-AIDS-related complications. Their increase after initiation of ART heralded a lack of virologic or clinical response, and hence their monitoring is clinically relevant. Conclusion: HIV infection induces remarkable expansion of CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+Treg cells, the frequency of which correlates with both clinical disease and signs of chronic immune cell activation. Monitoring their frequency in the circulation is a new marker of response to ART when effects on viremia and clinical response are not met.
2018
141 (6)
2220
2233
Antiretroviral therapy; CD8+CD28-CD127loCD39+regulatory T cell; HIV; Immunology and Allergy; Immunology
Fenoglio, Daniela; Dentone, Chiara; Signori, Alessio; Di Biagio, Antonio; Parodi, Alessia; Kalli, Francesca; Nasi, Giorgia; Curto, Monica; Cenderello,...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2053551
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