Frosch Anne E, Odumade Oludare A, Taylor Justin J, Ireland Kathleen, Ayodo George, Ondigo Bartholomew, Narum David L, Vulule John, John Chandy C
Division of Infectious Diseases and International Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455;
Division of Infectious Diseases and International Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455.
J Immunol. 2017 Jun 15;198(12):4629-4638. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1600773. Epub 2017 May 19.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is associated with B cell activation and exhaustion, and hypergammaglobulinemia. How these changes influence B cell responses to coinfections such as malaria is poorly understood. To address this, we compared B cell phenotypes and Abs specific for the vaccine candidate apical membrane Ag-1 (AMA1) in HIV-infected and uninfected adults living in Kenya. Surprisingly, HIV-1 infection was not associated with a difference in serum AMA1-specific Ab levels. HIV-infected individuals had a higher proportion of total atypical and total activated memory B cells (MBCs). Using an AMA1 tetramer to detect AMA1-specific B cells, HIV-infected individuals were also shown to have a higher proportion of AMA1-specific atypical MBCs. However, this proportional increase resulted in large part from a loss in the number of naive and resting MBCs rather than an increase in the number of atypical and activated cells. The loss of resting MBCs and naive B cells was mirrored in a population of cells specific for an Ag to which these individuals were unlikely to have been chronically exposed. Together, the data show that changes in Ag-specific B cell subsets in HIV-infected individuals mirror those in the overall B cell population, and suggest that the increased proportion of atypical MBC phenotypes found in HIV-1-infected individuals results from the loss of naive and resting MBCs.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染与B细胞活化、耗竭及高球蛋白血症有关。这些变化如何影响B细胞对疟疾等合并感染的反应,目前尚不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们比较了肯尼亚感染HIV和未感染HIV的成年人中B细胞表型以及针对候选疫苗顶膜抗原1(AMA1)的抗体。令人惊讶的是,HIV-1感染与血清AMA1特异性抗体水平的差异无关。HIV感染个体中总的非典型和总的活化记忆B细胞(MBC)比例更高。使用AMA1四聚体检测AMA1特异性B细胞,结果显示HIV感染个体中AMA1特异性非典型MBC的比例也更高。然而,这种比例增加很大程度上是由于初始和静止MBC数量的减少,而非非典型和活化细胞数量的增加。在一群针对这些个体不太可能长期接触的抗原的细胞中,也观察到了静止MBC和初始B细胞的减少。总之,数据表明HIV感染个体中抗原特异性B细胞亚群的变化反映了总体B细胞群体中的变化,并提示在HIV-1感染个体中发现的非典型MBC表型比例增加是由于初始和静止MBC的减少。