Tanko Ramla F, Soares Andreia P, Müller Tracey L, Garrett Nigel J, Samsunder Natasha, Abdool Karim Quarraisha, Abdool Karim Salim S, Riou Catherine, Burgers Wendy A
Department of Pathology, Division of Medical Virology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7925, South Africa.
Centre for the AIDS Program of Research in South Africa, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 4013, South Africa.
J Immunol. 2017 Feb 1;198(3):1220-1228. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601560. Epub 2016 Dec 30.
Human immunodeficiency virus infection induces a wide range of effects in B cells, including skewed memory cell differentiation, compromised B cell function, and hypergammaglobulinemia. However, data on the extent to which these B cell abnormalities can be reversed by antiretroviral therapy (ART) are limited. To investigate the effect of ART on B cells, the activation (CD86) and differentiation (IgD, CD27, and CD38) profiles of B cells were measured longitudinally in 19 HIV-infected individuals before (median, 2 mo) and after ART initiation (median, 12 mo) and compared with 19 age-matched HIV-uninfected individuals using flow cytometry. Twelve months of ART restored the typical distribution of B cell subsets, increasing the proportion of naive B cells (CD27IgDCD38) and concomitantly decreasing the immature transitional (CD27IgDCD38), unswitched memory (CD27IgDCD38), switched memory (CD27IgDCD38 or CD27IgDCD38), and plasmablast (CD27IgDCD38) subsets. However, B cell activation was only partially normalized post-ART, with the frequency of activated B cells (CD86CD40) reduced compared with pre-ART levels (p = 0.0001), but remaining significantly higher compared with HIV-uninfected individuals (p = 0.0001). Interestingly, unlike for T cell activation profiles, the extent of B cell activation prior to ART did not correlate with HIV plasma viral load, but positively associated with plasma sCD14 levels (p = 0.01, r = 0.58). Overall, ART partially normalizes the skewed B cell profiles induced by HIV, with some activation persisting. Understanding the effects of HIV on B cell dysfunction and restoration following ART may provide important insights into the mechanisms of HIV pathogenesis.
人类免疫缺陷病毒感染会在B细胞中引发多种效应,包括记忆细胞分化异常、B细胞功能受损以及高球蛋白血症。然而,关于抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)能在多大程度上逆转这些B细胞异常的数据有限。为了研究ART对B细胞的影响,我们采用流式细胞术,纵向检测了19名HIV感染者在开始ART之前(中位数为2个月)和之后(中位数为12个月)B细胞的活化(CD86)和分化(IgD、CD27和CD38)特征,并与19名年龄匹配的未感染HIV个体进行了比较。接受12个月的ART治疗后,B细胞亚群的典型分布得以恢复,未成熟B细胞(CD27IgDCD38)的比例增加,同时未成熟过渡型(CD27IgDCD38)、未转换记忆型(CD27IgDCD38)、转换记忆型(CD27IgDCD38或CD27IgDCD38)和浆母细胞(CD27IgDCD38)亚群的比例相应减少。然而,ART治疗后B细胞活化仅部分恢复正常,活化B细胞(CD86CD40)的频率与ART治疗前水平相比有所降低(p = 0.0001),但与未感染HIV个体相比仍显著更高(p = 0.0001)。有趣的是,与T细胞活化特征不同,ART治疗前B细胞活化程度与HIV血浆病毒载量无关,但与血浆sCD14水平呈正相关(p = 0.01,r = 0.58)。总体而言,ART部分纠正了由HIV诱导的B细胞特征异常,仍有一些活化现象持续存在。了解HIV对B细胞功能障碍的影响以及ART治疗后的恢复情况,可能为HIV发病机制提供重要见解。