Memory CD4+ T cells that co-express PD1 and CTLA4 have reduced response to activating stimuli facilitating HIV latency

共表达PD1和CTLA4的记忆性CD4+ T细胞对激活刺激的反应降低,从而促进HIV潜伏。

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作者:Thomas A Rasmussen ,Jennifer M Zerbato ,Ajantha Rhodes ,Carolin Tumpach ,Ashanti Dantanarayana ,James H McMahon ,Jillian S Y Lau ,J Judy Chang ,Celine Gubser ,Wendy Brown ,Rebecca Hoh ,Melissa Krone ,Rachel Pascoe ,Chris Y Chiu ,Michael Bramhall ,Hyun Jae Lee ,Ashraful Haque ,Rèmi Fromentin ,Nicolas Chomont ,Jeffrey Milush ,Renee M Van der Sluis ,Sarah Palmer ,Steven G Deeks ,Paul U Cameron ,Vanessa Evans ,Sharon R Lewin

Abstract

Programmed cell death 1 (PD1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4) suppress CD4+ T cell activation and may promote latent HIV infection. By performing leukapheresis (n = 21) and lymph node biopsies (n = 8) in people with HIV on antiretroviral therapy (ART) and sorting memory CD4+ T cells into subsets based on PD1/CTLA4 expression, we investigate the role of PD1 and CTLA 4 in HIV persistence. We show that double-positive (PD1+CTLA4+) cells in blood contain more HIV DNA compared with double-negative (PD1-CTLA4-) cells but still have a lower proportion of cells producing multiply spliced HIV RNA after stimulation as well as reduced upregulation of T cell activation and proliferation markers. Transcriptomics analyses identify differential expression of key genes regulating T cell activation and proliferation with MAF, KLRB1, and TIGIT being upregulated in double-positive compared with double-negative cells, whereas FOS is downregulated. We conclude that, in addition to being enriched for HIV DNA, double-positive cells are characterized by negative signaling and a reduced capacity to respond to stimulation, favoring HIV latency.

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