| Literature DB >> 20937128 |
Persephone Borrow1, Robin J Shattock, Annapurna Vyakarnam.
Abstract
This review summarizes recent advances and current gaps in understanding of innate immunity to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, and identifies key scientific priorities to enable application of this knowledge to the development of novel prevention strategies (vaccines and microbicides). It builds on productive discussion and new data arising out of a workshop on innate immunity against HIV held at the European Commission in Brussels, together with recent observations from the literature.Increasing evidence suggests that innate responses are key determinants of the outcome of HIV infection, influencing critical events in the earliest stages of infection including the efficiency of mucosal HIV transmission, establishment of initial foci of infection and local virus replication/spread as well as virus dissemination, the ensuing acute burst of viral replication, and the persisting viral load established. They also impact on the subsequent level of ongoing viral replication and rate of disease progression. Modulation of innate immunity thus has the potential to constitute a powerful effector strategy to complement traditional approaches to HIV prophylaxis and therapy. Importantly, there is increasing evidence to suggest that many arms of the innate response play both protective and pathogenic roles in HIV infection. Consequently, understanding the contributions made by components of the host innate response to HIV acquisition/spread versus control is a critical pre-requisite for the employment of innate immunity in vaccine or microbicide design, so that appropriate responses can be targeted for up- or down-modulation. There is also an important need to understand the mechanisms via which innate responses are triggered and mediate their activity, and to define the structure-function relationships of individual innate factors, so that they can be selectively exploited or inhibited. Finally, strategies for achieving modulation of innate functions need to be developed and subjected to rigorous testing to ensure that they achieve the desired level of protection without stimulation of immunopathological effects. Priority areas are identified where there are opportunities to accelerate the translation of recent gains in understanding of innate immunity into the design of improved or novel vaccine and microbicide strategies against HIV infection.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20937128 PMCID: PMC2964587 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-7-84
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Figure 1Sequence of events during the eclipse and viral expansion phases of acute HIV-1 infection. Mucosal transmission of HIV is followed by an eclipse phase of ~ 10 days during which small foci of infection are established in the mucosa, local virus replication occurs and infection spreads to local lymphoid tissues where further virus amplification takes place. More widespread virus dissemination then ensues, with infection of lymph nodes throughout the body including the GALT where high levels of virus replication take place, associated with an exponential increase in plasma viral titres. The horizontal dotted line indicates the limit of detection of many of the assays conventionally used to evaluate plasma HIV titres (~100 viral RNA copies/ml): the time at which this is exceeded constitutes the end of the eclipse phase. As illustrated, there is a relatively short window of opportunity during which infection could potentially be blocked, eradicated or constrained before substantial CD4+ T cell depletion occurs and the stage is set for subsequent disease progression.
Figure 2Opposing effects of soluble factors present at mucosal sites of HIV exposure on virus transmission and the establishment of infection. As illustrated, soluble factors at mucosal sites can mediate beneficial effects by exerting direct antiviral activity or reducing local inflammation; and/or can mediate detrimental effects by enhancing virus transmission, directly augmenting HIV infection of cells, recruiting CD4+ target cells or promoting local immune activation/increasing HIV replication. Vaccines and microbicides should be designed to tip the balance in favour of the beneficial effects.
Figure 3Diagram to illustrate the kinetics of activation of systemic innate responses during acute HIV-1 infection. The exponential increase in plasma viral titres (red line) is associated with elevations in circulating levels of a multiple cytokines and chemokines (coloured lines), which likely reflect the systemic activation of pDCs, cDCs, macrophages, NK cells and other cell types.
Examples of protective and pathogenic effects mediated by innate responses at different stages of acute and early HIV-1 infection
| Stage of infection | Beneficial effects | Detrimental effects |
|---|---|---|
| HIV transmission | SLPI, Elafin and defensins help to block HIV infection | SEVI and WFDC-1 enhance HIV infection |
| Establishment of initial foci of infection | Langerhans cells capture and destroy HIV virions | cDCs and macrophages act as sites for HIV replication and attract plus transmit infection to CD4+ T cells |
| Local virus replication and spread to draining lymph nodes | Type 1 IFNs continue to limit HIV replication | Proinflammatory cytokines, type 1 IFNs and WFDC-1 promote local immune activation, enhancing virus replication |
| Further viral amplification and systemic dissemination | DCs activate innate effector cells including NK and NKT cells and begin to induce HIV-specific T cell responses | cDCs and macrophages promote HIV transmission to CD4+ T cells |
| Exponential virus growth and depletion of central memory CD4+ T cells | HIV replication is combated by type 1 IFNs, NK and NKT cells | Immune activation mediated by DCs, NK cells and NKT cells enhances HIV replication |
| Ongoing virus replication | Soluble innate factors and NK cells contribute to control of virus replication | cDCs and macrophages continue to promote HIV transmission to CD4+ T cells |
Strategies for targeting innate immunity to combat HIV infection and research priorities to advance their development
| Strategy | Priorities for future research | Most rapidly-realised goals? |
|---|---|---|
| A. Development of microbicides and passive protection strategies that mediate defence at mucosal infection sites via deployment or local modulation of innate immunity | Structure-function studies to enable the design of small molecules that selectively induce the HIV-inhibitory properties of defensins, WAPs, etc | |
| Identify the key mechanisms involved in type 1 IFN-mediated inhibition of HIV replication so that the pathways involved can be selectively invoked to block viral infection | ||
| Evaluate the effect of local administration of immunosuppressive agents at mucosal exposure sites on HIV acquisition | ← | |
| B. Design of vaccines to prime adaptive responses that mediate protection via modulation of innate effector functions | Clarify the importance of ADCVI activity as a means of antibody-mediated control of HIV infection; and Define the key characteristics of antibodies that induce strong ADCVI activity (e.g. isotype, glycosylation status, specificity, affinity) | ← |
| Verify the existence of HIV-specific Treg cells and determine their in vivo roles, particularly their impact on generalised immune activation | ||
| C. Creation of strategies for achieving protection by directly inducing long-term alterations in innate subsets and/or their functions | Characterise NK cell memory in humans (e.g. NK populations involved, longevity, modes of induction); and Identify the ligands on HIV-infected cells that trigger NK cells mediating protective functions, to enable design of immunogens to stimulate these NK subsets | |
| Analyse the roles of NKT cell subsets in protection versus pathogenesis during HIV infection, to determine the utility of targeting these cells in vaccine design | ||
| Explore the effects of persisting vaccine vectors on local and/or systemic innate responses | ← | |