Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
UNC HIV Cure Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Front Immunol. 2019 Feb 26;10:291. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00291. eCollection 2019.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has transformed HIV from a fatal disease to a chronic condition. In recent years there has been considerable interest in strategies to enable HIV-infected individuals to cease ART without viral rebound, either by purging all cells infected harboring replication-competent virus (HIV eradication), or by boosting immune responses to allow durable suppression of virus without rebound (HIV remission). Both of these approaches may need to harness HIV-specific CD8 T cells to eliminate infected cells and/or prevent viral spread. In untreated infection, both HIV-specific and total CD8 T cells are dysfunctional. Here, we review our current understanding of both global and HIV-specific CD8 T cell immunity in HIV-infected individuals with durably suppressed viral load under ART, and its implications for HIV cure, eradication or remission. Overall, the literature indicates significant normalization of global T cell parameters, including CD4/8 ratio, activation status, and telomere length. Global characteristics of CD8 T cells from HIVART individuals align more closely with those of HIV-seronegative individuals than of viremic HIV-infected individuals. However, markers of senescence remain elevated, leading to the hypothesis that immune aging is accelerated in HIV-infected individuals on ART. This phenomenon could have implications for attempts to prime , or boost existing HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses. A major challenge for both HIV cure and remission strategies is to elicit HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses superior to that elicited by natural infection in terms of response kinetics, magnitude, breadth, viral suppressive capacity, and tissue localization. Addressing these issues will be critical to the success of HIV cure and remission attempts.
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)已经将 HIV 从一种致命疾病转变为一种慢性疾病。近年来,人们对能够使 HIV 感染者在没有病毒反弹的情况下停止 ART 的策略产生了浓厚的兴趣,这些策略要么通过清除所有携带复制能力病毒的感染细胞(HIV 清除),要么通过增强免疫反应来允许病毒在没有反弹的情况下持续抑制(HIV 缓解)。这两种方法都可能需要利用 HIV 特异性 CD8 T 细胞来消除感染细胞和/或阻止病毒传播。在未经治疗的感染中,HIV 特异性和总 CD8 T 细胞均功能失调。在这里,我们回顾了我们目前对接受 ART 治疗的病毒载量持久抑制的 HIV 感染者的全球和 HIV 特异性 CD8 T 细胞免疫的理解,以及它对 HIV 治愈、清除或缓解的影响。总的来说,文献表明,全球 T 细胞参数,包括 CD4/8 比、激活状态和端粒长度,都有显著的正常化。来自 HIVART 个体的 CD8 T 细胞的全球特征与 HIV 阴性个体的特征更为一致,而与病毒载量高的 HIV 感染者的特征不太一致。然而,衰老标志物仍然升高,这导致了一个假设,即在接受 ART 的 HIV 感染者中,免疫衰老加速。这种现象可能会对刺激或增强现有的 HIV 特异性 CD8 T 细胞反应产生影响。对于 HIV 治愈和缓解策略来说,一个主要的挑战是激发 HIV 特异性 CD8 T 细胞反应,使其在反应动力学、强度、广度、病毒抑制能力和组织定位方面优于自然感染所产生的反应。解决这些问题对于 HIV 治愈和缓解尝试的成功至关重要。