Infectious Diseases and Immunity in Global Health Program, Research Institute of McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada, Department of Experimental Medicine, McGill University, Montreal QC, Canada.
Infectious Diseases and Immunity in Global Health Program, Research Institute of McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Virologie (Montrouge). 2024 Aug 1;28(4):1-20. doi: 10.1684/vir.2024.1058.
While antiretroviral therapy (ART) has revolutionized the management of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and has enabled people living with HIV (PLWH) to achieve near-normal life expectancies, an HIV cure remains elusive due to the presence of HIV reservoirs. Furthermore, compared with individuals in the general population, PLWH support a higher burden of multimorbidity, including pulmonary diseases of both an infectious and non-infection nature, which may be a consequence of the formation of HIV reservoirs. Their gut, lymph nodes, brain, testes and lungs constitute important anatomic sites for the reservoirs. While CD4+ T cells, and particularly memory CD4+ T cells, are the best characterized cellular HIV reservoirs, tissue resident macrophages (TRM) and alveolar macrophages (AM) also harbor HIV infection. AM are the most abundant cells in bronchoalveolar (BAL) fluid in healthy conditions, and act as sentinels in the alveolar space by patrolling and clearing debris, microbes and surfactant recycling. Long-lived tissue-resident AM of embryonic origin have the capacity of self-renewal without replenishment from peripheral monocytes. As in other tissues, close cell-cell contacts in lungs also provide a milieu conducive for cell-to-cell spread of HIV infection and establishment of reservoirs. As lungs are in constant exposure to antigens from the external environment, this situation contributes to pro-inflammatory phenotype rendering pulmonary immune cells exhausted and senescent-an environment facilitating HIV persistence. Factors such as tobacco and e-cigarette smoking, lung microbiome dysbiosis and respiratory coinfections further drive antigenic stimulation and HIV replication. HIV replication, in turn, contributes to ongoing inflammation and clonal expansion. Herein, the potential role of AM in HIV persistence is discussed. Furthermore, their contribution towards pulmonary inflammation and immune dysregulation, which may in turn render PLWH susceptible to chronic lung disease, despite ART, is explored. Finally, strategies to eliminate HIV-infected AM are discussed.
虽然抗逆转录病毒疗法 (ART) 彻底改变了人类免疫缺陷病毒 (HIV) 的管理方式,使 HIV 感染者 (PLWH) 能够实现接近正常的预期寿命,但由于 HIV 储存库的存在,HIV 仍然难以治愈。此外,与一般人群中的个体相比,PLWH 承受着更高的多种疾病负担,包括传染性和非传染性肺部疾病,这可能是 HIV 储存库形成的结果。他们的肠道、淋巴结、大脑、睾丸和肺部是储存库的重要解剖部位。虽然 CD4+T 细胞,特别是记忆 CD4+T 细胞,是最具特征性的细胞 HIV 储存库,但组织驻留巨噬细胞 (TRM) 和肺泡巨噬细胞 (AM) 也携带 HIV 感染。AM 在健康条件下是支气管肺泡 (BAL) 液中最丰富的细胞,通过巡逻和清除碎片、微生物和表面活性剂再循环,在肺泡空间充当哨兵。具有胚胎起源的长寿组织驻留 AM 具有自我更新的能力,无需外周单核细胞补充。与其他组织一样,肺部的紧密细胞间接触也为 HIV 感染的细胞间传播和储存库的建立提供了有利环境。由于肺部不断暴露于来自外部环境的抗原,这种情况导致促炎表型使肺部免疫细胞衰竭和衰老——有利于 HIV 持续存在的环境。烟草和电子烟吸烟、肺部微生物组失调和呼吸道合并感染等因素进一步促进抗原刺激和 HIV 复制。反过来,HIV 复制会导致持续的炎症和克隆扩增。在此,讨论了 AM 在 HIV 持续存在中的潜在作用。此外,还探讨了它们对肺部炎症和免疫失调的贡献,这反过来可能使 PLWH 尽管接受了 ART 治疗,但仍容易患上慢性肺部疾病。最后,讨论了消除感染 HIV 的 AM 的策略。