Abstract

Co-infection with HCV and HIV-1 is a problem of increasing importance and the role of innate cellular immunity in this co-infection is incompletely understood. Here, we have observed sharply elevated numbers of CD56 −CD16 + perforin low NK cells in HCV/HIV-1 co-infected subjects on antiretroviral therapy. Interestingly, this expansion of unconventional CD56 − NK cells rapidly reverted when HCV was suppressed by IFNα and ribavirin treatment, and was not seen in mono-infected control groups. In vitro experiments suggested that this effect of treatment was due to suppression of HCV viremia rather than a direct effect of IFNα on these cells. In contrast, the conventional CD56 + NK cells were largely unchanged in subjects with high HCV loads, although they exhibited slightly decreased perforin expression. With delayed kinetics, the CD56 bright immuno-regulatory NK cell subset temporarily increased to supranormal levels in response to HCV treatment. In contrast to the NK compartment, the CD1d-restricted NKT cells were severely reduced by the co-infection and not restored by treatment. Together, our data suggest that the high HCV loads in HCV/HIV-1 co-infection alter the NK cell compartment in a way not observed in HCV mono-infection.

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