Abstract

Suppression mediated by Treg cells is a balance between Treg-cell suppressive potency versus sensitivity of effector cells to Treg-cell suppression. We assessed if this balance, along with Treg-cell number relative to the Treg-cell counter-regulatory cytokine IL-17, differs between asymptomatic HIV(+) subjects versus those who progress onto disease. Cross-over studies comparing Treg-cell potency, measured by effector cell proliferation or IFN-γ expression, from HIV-infected versus control subjects to suppress the proliferation of allogeneic control effector cells demonstrated increased sensitivity of CD4(+) CD25(-) effector cells from asymptomatic HIV(+) subjects to suppression, rather than an increase in the suppressive potential of their CD4(+) CD25(+) Treg cells. In contrast, HIV(+) progressors did not differ from controls in Treg-cell potency or effector cell sensitivity to Treg-cell suppression. Both CD4(+) CD25(+) Foxp3(+) Treg and effector IL-17 absolute cell numbers were significantly lower in all HIV(+) subjects tested and not restored by antiviral therapy. Thus, these novel data suggest that elevated Treg-cell-mediated suppression due to increased sensitivity of effectors to Treg cells may be a natural host response in chronic asymptomatic HIV infection, which is lost as disease progresses and that this feature of CD25(-) effector cells is not inextricably linked to reduced production of the Treg-cell counter-regulatory cytokine IL-17.

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