Vulnerability to reservoir reseeding due to high immune activation after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in individuals with HIV-1
Eberhard, Johanna M.; Angin, Mathieu; Passaes, Caroline; Salgado, Maria; Monceaux, Valerie; Knops, Elena; Kobbe, Guido; Jensen, Bjoern; Christopeit, Maximilian; Kroeger, Nicolaus; Vandekerckhove, Linos; Badiola, Jon; Bandera, Alessandra; Raj, Kavita; van L
Publicación: SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
2020
VL / 12 - BP / - EP /
abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is the only medical intervention that has led to an HIV cure. Whereas the HIV reservoir sharply decreases after allo-HSCT, the dynamics of the T cell reconstitution has not been comprehensively described. We analyzed the activation and differentiation of CD4(+) and CD8(+)T cells, and the breadth and quality of HIV- and CMV-specific CD8(+) T cell responses in 16 patients with HIV who underwent allo-HSCT (including five individuals who received cells from CCR5432/432 donors) to treat their underlying hematological malignancy and who remained on antiretroviral therapy (ART). We found that reconstitution of the T cell compartment after allo-HSCT was slow and heterogeneous with an initial expansion of activated CD4(+)T cells that preceded the expansion of CD8(+)T cells. Although HIV-specific CD8(+)T cells disappeared immediately after allo-HSCT, weak HIV-specific CD8 T+ cell responses were detectable several weeks after transplant and could still be detected at the time of full T cell chimerism, indicating that de novo priming, and hence antigen exposure, occurred during the time of T cell expansion. These HIV-specific T cells had limited functionality compared with CMV-specific CD8(+)T cells and persisted years after allo-HSCT. In conclusion, immune reconstitution was slow, heterogeneous, and incomplete and coincided with de novo detection of weak HIV-specific T cell responses. The initial short phase of high T cell activation, in which HIV antigens were present, may constitute a window of vulnerability for the reseeding of viral reservoirs, emphasizing the importance of maintaining ART directly after allo-HSCT.
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Molecular Biology & Genetics
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