| Literature DB >> 30863403 |
Joanna A Warren1, Genevieve Clutton1, Nilu Goonetilleke1,2.
Abstract
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has transformed HIV from a fatal disease to a chronic condition. In recent years there has been considerable interest in strategies to enable HIV-infected individuals to cease ART without viral rebound, either by purging all cells infected harboring replication-competent virus (HIV eradication), or by boosting immune responses to allow durable suppression of virus without rebound (HIV remission). Both of these approaches may need to harness HIV-specific CD8+ T cells to eliminate infected cells and/or prevent viral spread. In untreated infection, both HIV-specific and total CD8+ T cells are dysfunctional. Here, we review our current understanding of both global and HIV-specific CD8+ T cell immunity in HIV-infected individuals with durably suppressed viral load under ART, and its implications for HIV cure, eradication or remission. Overall, the literature indicates significant normalization of global T cell parameters, including CD4/8 ratio, activation status, and telomere length. Global characteristics of CD8+ T cells from HIV+ART+ individuals align more closely with those of HIV-seronegative individuals than of viremic HIV-infected individuals. However, markers of senescence remain elevated, leading to the hypothesis that immune aging is accelerated in HIV-infected individuals on ART. This phenomenon could have implications for attempts to prime de novo, or boost existing HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses. A major challenge for both HIV cure and remission strategies is to elicit HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses superior to that elicited by natural infection in terms of response kinetics, magnitude, breadth, viral suppressive capacity, and tissue localization. Addressing these issues will be critical to the success of HIV cure and remission attempts.Entities:
Keywords: CD8 T cell; HIV; HIV cure strategies; aging; antiretroviral therapy (ART); immunosenescence; vaccines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30863403 PMCID: PMC6400228 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1HIV Cure Strategies may require different properties of CD8+ T cells. (Top) Outline of typical HIV rebound (red line) following the cessation of ART. Although the magnitude of the HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response increases, there is a progressive loss of function with time off ART. (Middle) HIV Eradication of the replication competent reservoir (black line) combining latency reversal agents and immunotherapies to boost or redirect CD8+ T cells (purple line) to rapidly eliminate all cells infected with HIV. Following viral clearance, the magnitude of the HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response would decline, but a small population of functional memory cells would persist long-term. (Bottom) Durable ART-free remission in which the CD8+ T cell host immune response limits HIV rebound without decreasing the size of the HIV reservoir. This strategy may require intermittent boosting of the CD8+ T cell response (for example, through immunization) to combat a potential decline in the magnitude and function of HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses over time. It is likely that different functional properties of CD8+ T cells will be required for HIV eradication (e.g., rapid killing, penetration of tissue reservoirs) vs. HIV remission (e.g., memory maintenance). Note, HIV eradication and remission strategies may be combined.
Total T cell characteristics in HIV seronegative and HIV seropositive participants relative to HIV seropositive, durably ART suppressed individuals (↑, higher relative to ART treated; ↓, lower relative to ART treated; ≈, comparable to ART treated).
| CD4/CD8 ratio | ↑ | ≈ | ≈/↑ | ↓ | ↓ | ( | |
| CD8+ subsets | Naïve | ↑ | ≈ | ↑ | ↑ | ≈/↓ | ( |
| Central memory | ≈/↓ | ≈ | ≈ | ≈/↓ | ≈ | ( | |
| Effector memory | ↓/≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ≈/↑ | ( | |
| TEMRA | ≈ | ≈/↓ | ≈ | ≈ | ( | ||
| CD8+ T cell activation | % CD38+ HLA-DR+ | ≈ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ( |
| % PD-1 expression | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ↑ | ( | ||
| CD8+ senescence | Telomere length | ↑ | ≈ | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ( |
| TCR diversity | ↑≈ | ≈ | ↓ | ( | |||
| %CD27−CD28+ | ↑≈ | ≈ | ↑ | ( | |||
| %CD57+ | ↓ | ≈ | ↑ | ↑ | ( | ||
| %CD27−CD28− | ↓≈ | ≈ | ( | ||||
| CMV | CMV-specific | ↓ | ↓ | ≈ | ↓ | ( | |
| CD4 % | Peripheral blood | ↑/≈ | ≈ | ≈/↓ | ↓ | ( | |
| Gut mucosa | ↑ | ≈ | ↓ | ↓ | ( | ||
Includes immunological non-responders in whom VL is suppressed by CD4 T cells do not fully restore. Generally immunological non-responders exhibit more residual CD8 T cell dysregulation.
Elite controllers: viral load/ml < 50, CD4/μl >350; Viremic controllers: viral load/ml 50–2,000, CD4/μl >350; Typical progressors: viral load/ml >2,000, CD4/μl >350; Progressors (AIDS): viral load/ml >2,000, CD4/μl >200.
non-significant changes reported relative to ART suppressed individuals.
HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses in HIV seropositive, treatment naïve individuals relative to HIV seropositive durably ART suppressed individuals. (↑, higher relative to ART treated; ↓, lower relative to ART treated; ≈, comparable to ART treated).
| Magnitude | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ( | |
| Breadth | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ( | |
| Immunodominant protein | Gag | Gag | Env | ( | |
| Polyfunctionality | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ( | |
| Viral inhibition | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ( | |
| Proliferation | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ( | |
| Phenotype | % HLA-DR+ CD38+ | ≈ | ↑ | ↑ | ( |
| Exhaustion | % PD-1 | ≈ | ↑ | ( | |
| % LAG-3 | ≈ | ( | |||
| % CD160 | ↑ | ( | |||
| % 2B4 | ≈ | ( | |||
| % TIGIT | ↓ | ↑ | ( | ||
| Survival factors | Cleaved caspase 3- proapoptotic | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ( |
| BCL-2 antiapoptotic | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ | ( |
Elite controllers: viral load/ml < 50, CD4/μl >350; Viremic controllers: viral load/ml 50–2,000, CD4/μl >350; Typical progressors: viral load/ml >2,000, CD4/μl >350; Progressors (AIDS): viral load/ml >2,000, CD4/μl >200.
Polyfunctionality: expression of multiple cytokines and chemokines (ex. IFNy, TNFα, IL-2).
Proapoptotic marker, cleaved caspase-3 (CC3) and antiapototic marker (Bcl-2), regulate the mitochondrial released of cytochrome C to induce apoptosis. Bcl-2 negatively regulates the induction of the apoptotic pathway.