Emu Brinda, Sinclair Elizabeth, Favre David, Moretto Walter J, Hsue Priscilla, Hoh Rebecca, Martin Jeffrey N, Nixon Douglas F, McCune Joseph M, Deeks Steven G
Department of Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, 94110, USA.
J Virol. 2005 Nov;79(22):14169-78. doi: 10.1128/JVI.79.22.14169-14178.2005.
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-mediated immune response may be beneficial or harmful, depending on the balance between expansion of HIV-specific T cells and the level of generalized immune activation. The current study utilizes multicolor cytokine flow cytometry to study HIV-specific T cells and T-cell activation in 179 chronically infected individuals at various stages of HIV disease, including those with low-level viremia in the absence of therapy ("controllers"), low-level drug-resistant viremia in the presence of therapy (partial controllers on antiretroviral therapy [PCAT]), and high-level viremia ("noncontrollers"). Compared to noncontrollers, controllers exhibited higher frequencies of HIV-specific interleukin-2-positive gamma interferon-positive (IL-2(+) IFN-gamma(+)) CD4(+) T cells. The presence of HIV-specific CD4(+) IL-2(+) T cells was associated with low levels of proliferating T cells within the less-differentiated T-cell subpopulations (defined by CD45RA, CCR7, CD27, and CD28). Despite prior history of progressive disease, PCAT patients exhibited many immunologic characteristics seen in controllers, including high frequencies of IL-2(+) IFN-gamma(+) CD4(+) T cells. Measures of immune activation were lower in all CD8(+) T-cell subsets in controllers and PCAT compared to noncontrollers. Thus, control of HIV replication is associated with high levels of HIV-specific IL-2(+) and IFN-gamma(+) CD4(+) T cells and low levels of T-cell activation. This immunologic state is one where the host responds to HIV by expanding but not exhausting HIV-specific T cells while maintaining a relatively quiescent immune system. Despite a history of advanced HIV disease, a subset of individuals with multidrug-resistant HIV exhibit an immunologic profile comparable to that of controllers, suggesting that functional immunity can be reconstituted with partially suppressive highly active antiretroviral therapy.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)介导的免疫反应可能有益也可能有害,这取决于HIV特异性T细胞的扩增与全身性免疫激活水平之间的平衡。当前研究利用多色细胞因子流式细胞术,对179名处于HIV疾病不同阶段的慢性感染个体的HIV特异性T细胞和T细胞激活情况进行研究,这些个体包括未经治疗时病毒血症水平较低的个体(“病毒控制者”)、接受治疗时病毒耐药性水平较低的个体(抗逆转录病毒治疗部分控制者[PCAT])以及病毒血症水平较高的个体(“非病毒控制者”)。与非病毒控制者相比,病毒控制者表现出更高频率的HIV特异性白细胞介素-2阳性γ干扰素阳性(IL-2(+) IFN-γ(+))CD4(+) T细胞。HIV特异性CD4(+) IL-2(+) T细胞的存在与分化程度较低的T细胞亚群(由CD45RA、CCR7、CD27和CD28定义)内增殖T细胞的低水平相关。尽管有疾病进展的既往史,但PCAT患者表现出许多在病毒控制者中可见的免疫特征,包括高频率的IL-2(+) IFN-γ(+) CD4(+) T细胞。与非病毒控制者相比,病毒控制者和PCAT患者所有CD8(+) T细胞亚群中的免疫激活指标均较低。因此,HIV复制的控制与高水平的HIV特异性IL-2(+)和IFN-γ(+) CD4(+) T细胞以及低水平的T细胞激活相关。这种免疫状态是宿主通过扩增而非耗尽HIV特异性T细胞同时维持相对静止的免疫系统来应对HIV的状态。尽管有晚期HIV疾病史,但一部分具有多药耐药HIV的个体表现出与病毒控制者相当的免疫特征,这表明通过部分抑制性的高效抗逆转录病毒治疗可以重建功能性免疫。