Literature DB >> 32598115

Monocyte and CD4+ T-cell antiviral and innate responses associated with HIV-1 inflammation and cognitive impairment.

Vishakha Sharma1, Christopher Bryant, Maria Montero, Matthew Creegan, Bonnie Slike, Shelly J Krebs, Silvia Ratto-Kim, Victor Valcour, Pasiri Sithinamsuwan, Thep Chalermchai, Michael A Eller, Diane L Bolton.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Mechanisms underlying immune activation and HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) in untreated chronic infection remain unclear. The objective of this study was to identify phenotypic and transcriptional changes in blood monocytes and CD4 T cells in HIV-1-infected and uninfected individuals and elucidate processes associated with neurocognitive impairment.
DESIGN: A group of chronically HIV-1-infected Thai individuals (n = 19) were selected for comparison with healthy donor controls (n = 10). Infected participants were further classified as cognitively normal (n = 10) or with HAND (n = 9). Peripheral monocytes and CD4 T cells were phenotyped by flow cytometry and simultaneously isolated for multiplex qPCR-targeted gene expression profiling directly ex vivo. The frequency of HIV-1 RNA-positive cells was estimated by limiting dilution cell sorting.
RESULTS: Expression of genes and proteins involved in cellular activation and proinflammatory immune responses was increased in monocytes and CD4 T cells from HIV-1-infected relative to uninfected individuals. Gene expression profiles of both CD4 T cells and monocytes correlated with soluble markers of inflammation in the periphery (P < 0.05). By contrast, only modest differences in gene programs were observed between cognitively normal and HAND cases. These included increased monocyte surface CD169 protein expression relative to cognitively normal (P = 0.10), decreased surface CD163 expression relative to uninfected (P = 0.02) and cognitively normal (P = 0.06), and downregulation of EMR2 (P = 0.04) and STAT1 (P = 0.02) relative to cognitively normal.
CONCLUSION: Our data support a model of highly activated monocytes and CD4 T cells associated with inflammation in chronic HIV-1 infection, but impaired monocyte anti-inflammatory responses in HAND compared with cognitively normal.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32598115     DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000002537

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  1 in total

1.  Cerebrospinal fluid CD4+ T cell infection in humans and macaques during acute HIV-1 and SHIV infection.

Authors:  Vishakha Sharma; Matthew Creegan; Andrey Tokarev; Denise Hsu; Bonnie M Slike; Carlo Sacdalan; Phillip Chan; Serena Spudich; Jintanat Ananworanich; Michael A Eller; Shelly J Krebs; Sandhya Vasan; Diane L Bolton
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2021-12-07       Impact factor: 6.823

  1 in total

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