Pathology Advanced Translational Research Unit (PATRU), Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Department, Emory University, School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 2021 Jul 1;16(4):215-222. doi: 10.1097/COH.0000000000000692.
People living with HIV who fail to fully reconstitute CD4+T cells after combination antiretroviral therapy therapy (i.e. immune nonresponders or INRs) have higher frequencies of exhausted T cells are enriched in a small pool of memory T cells where HIV persists and have an abundance of plasma metabolites of bacterial and host origins. Here, we review the current understanding of critical features of T cell exhaustion associated with HIV persistence; we propose to develop novel strategies to reinvigorate the effector function of exhausted T cells with the aim of purging the HIV reservoir.
We and others have recently reported the role of microbiota and metabolites in regulating T cell homeostasis, effector function, and senescence. We have observed that bacteria of the Firmicute phyla (specifically members of the genus Lactobacilli), associated metabolites (β-hydroxybutyrate family), and bile acids can promote regulatory T cell differentiation in INRs with a senescent peripheral blood gene expression profile.
The cross-talk between immune cells and gut microbes at the intestinal mucosa (a major effector site of the mucosal immune response), regulates the priming, proliferation, and differentiation of local and distant immune responses. This cross-talk via the production of major metabolite families (like serum amyloid A, polysaccharide A, and aryl hydrocarbon receptor ligands) plays a key role in maintaining immune homeostasis. HIV infection/persistence leads to gut dysbiosis/microbial translocation, resulting in the local and systemic dissemination of microbes. The ensuing increase in immune cell-microbiome (including pathogens) interaction promotes heightened inflammatory responses and is implicated in regulating innate/adaptive immune effector differentiation cascades that drive HIV persistence. The exact role of the microbiota and associated metabolites in regulating T cell- mediated effector functions that can restrict HIV persistence continue to be the subject of on-going studies and are reviewed here.
综述目的:接受联合抗逆转录病毒治疗后未能完全重建 CD4+T 细胞的 HIV 感染者(即免疫无应答者或 INR)具有更高频率的耗竭 T 细胞,这些细胞在一小部分记忆 T 细胞中富集,HIV 在这些细胞中持续存在,并且存在大量细菌和宿主来源的血浆代谢物。在此,我们综述了与 HIV 持续存在相关的 T 细胞耗竭的关键特征的现有认识;我们建议开发新策略来重振耗竭 T 细胞的效应功能,以期清除 HIV 储存库。
最近的发现:我们和其他人最近报道了微生物组和代谢物在调节 T 细胞稳态、效应功能和衰老中的作用。我们观察到厚壁菌门(特别是乳杆菌属成员)的细菌、相关代谢物(β-羟基丁酸家族)和胆汁酸可以促进具有衰老外周血基因表达谱的 INR 中调节性 T 细胞的分化。
总结:肠道黏膜(黏膜免疫反应的主要效应部位)处免疫细胞和肠道微生物之间的相互作用,调节局部和远处免疫反应的启动、增殖和分化。这种通过产生主要代谢物家族(如血清淀粉样蛋白 A、多糖 A 和芳烃受体配体)的相互作用在维持免疫稳态中起着关键作用。HIV 感染/持续存在导致肠道菌群失调/微生物易位,导致微生物在局部和全身传播。随之而来的免疫细胞-微生物(包括病原体)相互作用的增加促进了炎症反应的加剧,并与调节先天/适应性免疫效应细胞分化级联反应有关,该级联反应可驱动 HIV 持续存在。微生物组和相关代谢物在调节可限制 HIV 持续存在的 T 细胞介导的效应功能中的确切作用仍然是正在进行的研究的主题,本文对此进行了综述。