| Literature DB >> 30459753 |
Zoe Boyer1, Sarah Palmer1,2.
Abstract
The advent of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has seen a dramatic decrease in the morbidity and mortality of individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). However, ART is not curative and HIV persists in treated individuals within a pool of infected CD4+ memory T cells. The targeting and elimination of these cells, termed the latent HIV reservoir, may be essential in establishing a cure for HIV. Current HIV reservoir research is focused on identifying cells that harbor latent, replication-competent, HIV provirus using specific cell surface markers. Recently, studies have turned to immune checkpoint (IC) molecules, such as programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1). IC molecules are regulators of the immune system and have previously been linked to HIV infection. Furthermore, cells isolated from treated individuals co-expressing PD-1 alongside other IC molecules are enriched for HIV DNA. Administration of a IC blocking antibodies resulted in an increase of cell-associated HIV RNA within an individual, indicating the potential for this therapeutic to be utilized as a latency reversing agent. IC inhibitors could target CD4+ T cells expressing IC molecules and possibly enhance HIV transcription, allowing for the elimination of these cells by either ART or the immune system. However, treatment with IC inhibitors has been associated with toxicities such as immune-related adverse events and therefore future studies should proceed with caution.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; PD-1; T cell exhaustion; immune checkpoint molecules; latent HIV reservoir; memory T cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30459753 PMCID: PMC6232919 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Latency reversing agents (LRA) are one half of the “shock and kill” approach. They function to induce HIV transcription. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACis) promote histone acetylation and induce transcription of viral products. Immune checkpoint (IC) inhibitors could also function as LRA. Anti-PD-1 antibodies bind PD-1 on both HIV infected CD4+ T cells and HIV-specific CD8+ T cells. The binding of PD-1 by the antibody will disinhibit signals sent into the cells by the immune checkpoint molecule. Cells will become transcriptionally active, with CD4+ T cells producing viral products that ultimately result in the death of the cell, and CD8+ T cells having effector function restored, allowing them to target infected CD4+ T cells.
Summary of published trials and case-reports investigating immune checkpoint inhibitors in HIV.
| ( | SIV-infected rhesus macaques | PD-1 ( | Significant reduction in plasma viremia. Macaques treated during late chronic stage of infection had viral RNA copies drop below pre-treatment levels and delayed disease progression. | Rapid expansion of SIV-specific CD8+ T cells. |
| ( | SIV-infected rhesus macaques | CTLA-4 ( | Significant increase in plasma viremia. | Increased levels of T cell activation |
| ( | Case report of HIV/HCV co-infected patient with malignancy (melanoma) | CTLA-4 ( | Viral loads did not increase following administration of treatment. | No immune-related adverse events experienced. |
| ( | HIV-infected participants with malignancy (NSCLC) | PD-1 ( | Viral loads remained undetectable. | CD4+ T cell counts remained stable. |
| ( | HIV-infected participants with malignancy | PD-1 ( | No consistent changes in CD4+ T cell-associated HIV RNA or DNA or plasma viremia. | PD-1 binding decreased following initiation of therapy. No consistent changes in frequency of total or activated CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. |
| ( | Case report of HIV-infected patient with malignancy (NSCLC) | PD-1 ( | Transient increase in plasma HIV copies. Overall decrease in cell-associated HIV DNA. | Total CD4+ and CD8+ counts remained stable. Decrease in PD-1+ T cells. |
| ( | Case report of HIV-infected patient with malignancy (NSCLC) | PD-1 ( | Transient increase in cell-associated HIV DNA levels. | Transient increase in IL-6 levels. Transient increase in CD4+ and CD8+ T cell counts. Decrease of PD-1 expression by T cells. |
| ( | Case report of HIV-infected patient with malignancy (melanoma) | CTLA-4 ( | Cyclical decrease in plasma HIV RNA levels following each dose of antibody, with an overall decline from 60 to 5 copies/ml. Cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA from CD4+ T cells increased ~20 fold. | Increase in total CD4+ T cell numbers. |
| ( | Case report of HIV-infected patient [from Wightman et al.( | PD-1 ( | Cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA increased ~25 fold. Ratio of cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA:HIV DNA significantly increased. | No changes reported. |
| ( | Otherwise healthy HIV-infected participants | PD-L1 ( | No consistent changes in cell-associated RNA or DNA. | Significant increase in HIV-specific CD8+ T cells in 2 of 6 treated participants. |