| Literature DB >> 26546609 |
Rafael Cubas1, Julien van Grevenynghe2, Saintedym Wills3, Lela Kardava4, Brian H Santich4, Clarisa M Buckner4, Roshell Muir1, Virginie Tardif1, Carmen Nichols1, Francesco Procopio5, Zhong He1, Talibah Metcalf1, Khader Ghneim1, Michela Locci6, Petronella Ancuta7, Jean-Pierre Routy8, Lydie Trautmann1, Yuxing Li9, Adrian B McDermott10, Rick A Koup10, Constantinos Petrovas10, Steven A Migueles11, Mark Connors11, Georgia D Tomaras3, Susan Moir4, Shane Crotty12, Elias K Haddad13.
Abstract
Despite the overwhelming benefits of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in curtailing viral load in HIV-infected individuals, ART does not fully restore cellular and humoral immunity. HIV-infected individuals under ART show reduced responses to vaccination and infections and are unable to mount an effective antiviral immune response upon ART cessation. Many factors contribute to these defects, including persistent inflammation, especially in lymphoid tissues, where T follicular helper (Tfh) cells instruct and help B cells launch an effective humoral immune response. In this study we investigated the phenotype and function of circulating memory Tfh cells as a surrogate of Tfh cells in lymph nodes and found significant impairment of this cell population in chronically HIV-infected individuals, leading to reduced B cell responses. We further show that these aberrant memory Tfh cells exhibit an IL-2-responsive gene signature and are more polarized toward a Th1 phenotype. Treatment of functional memory Tfh cells with IL-2 was able to recapitulate the detrimental reprogramming. Importantly, this defect was reversible, as interfering with the IL-2 signaling pathway helped reverse the abnormal differentiation and improved Ab responses. Thus, reversible reprogramming of memory Tfh cells in HIV-infected individuals could be used to enhance Ab responses. Altered microenvironmental conditions in lymphoid tissues leading to altered Tfh cell differentiation could provide one explanation for the poor responsiveness of HIV-infected individuals to new Ags. This explanation has important implications for the development of therapeutic interventions to enhance HIV- and vaccine-mediated Ab responses in patients under ART.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26546609 PMCID: PMC4670798 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422