Abstract

HIV-1 is able to evade innate antiviral responses during acute infection to establish a chronic systemic infection which, in the absence of antiretroviral therapy (ART), typically progresses to severe immunodeficiency. Understanding these early innate immune responses against HIV-1 and their mechanisms of failure is relevant to the development of interventions to better prevent HIV-1 transmission. Human beta defensins (HBDs) are antibacterial peptides but have recently also been associated with control of viral replication. HBD1 and 2 are expressed in PBMCs as well as intestinal tissue, but their expression in vivo during HIV-1 infection has not been characterized. We demonstrate that during acute HIV-1 infection, HBD1 but not HBD2 is highly upregulated in circulating monocytes but returns to baseline levels during chronic infection. HBD1 expression in monocytes can be induced by HIV-1 in vitro, although direct infection may not entirely account for the increase in HBD1 during acute infection. We provide evidence that HIV-1 triggers antiviral IFN-α responses, which act as a potent inducer of HBD1. Our results show the first characterization of induction of an HBD during acute and chronic viral infection in humans. HBD1 has been reported to have low activity against HIV-1 compared to other defensins, suggesting that in vivo induced defensins may not significantly contribute to the robust early antiviral response against HIV-1. These data provide important insight into the in vivo kinetics of HBD expression, the mechanism of HBD1 induction by HIV-1, and the role of HBDs in the early innate response to HIV-1 during acute infection.

Highlights

  • Human Beta Defensins (HBDs) are a critical part of the early innate immune response against invading pathogens [1,2,3]

  • HBD1 was constitutively expressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) obtained from HIV-1 uninfected subjects with levels significantly increased during acute HIV-1 infection (4-fold increase relative to HIV-1 uninfected, p = 0.0002) but not in those with chronic progressive (PG) or immunologically controlled (CT) infection (Fig 1A)

  • Our data indicate that HBD1 is constitutively expressed in PBMCs and is upregulated during acute HIV-1 infection but returns to baseline levels during chronic progressive infection

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Summary

Introduction

Human Beta Defensins (HBDs) are a critical part of the early innate immune response against invading pathogens [1,2,3]. They are short cationic antimicrobial peptides which directly protect against a broad range of bacteria and viruses [3,4,5]. They have been shown to induce chemotaxis of T cells, dendritic cells (DCs) and macrophages [4, 6]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0173161 March 2, 2017

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