HIV-1 treatment timing shapes the human intestinal memory B-cell repertoire to commensal bacteria

HIV-1治疗时机会影响人类肠道记忆B细胞对共生细菌的识别。

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作者:Cyril Planchais,Luis M Molinos-Albert,Pierre Rosenbaum,Thierry Hieu,Alexia Kanyavuz,Dominique Clermont,Thierry Prazuck,Laurent Lefrou,Jordan D Dimitrov,Sophie Hüe,Laurent Hocqueloux,Hugo Mouquet

Abstract

HIV-1 infection causes severe alterations of gut mucosa, microbiota and immune system, which can be curbed by early antiretroviral therapy. Here, we investigate how treatment timing affects intestinal memory B-cell and plasmablast repertoires of HIV-1-infected humans. We show that only class-switched memory B cells markedly differ between subjects treated during the acute and chronic phases of infection. Intestinal memory B-cell monoclonal antibodies show more prevalent polyreactive and commensal bacteria-reactive clones in late- compared to early-treated individuals. Mirroring this, serum IgA polyreactivity and commensal-reactivity are strongly increased in late-treated individuals and correlate with intestinal permeability and systemic inflammatory markers. Polyreactive blood IgA memory B cells, many of which egressed from the gut, are also substantially enriched in late-treated individuals. Our data establish gut and systemic B-cell polyreactivity to commensal bacteria as hallmarks of chronic HIV-1 infection and suggest that initiating treatment early may limit intestinal B-cell abnormalities compromising HIV-1 humoral response.

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