Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals with latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection have substantially higher rates of progression to active tuberculosis than HIV-uninfected individuals with latent tuberculosis. To explore HIV-induced deficits in M. tuberculosis-specific CD8+ T-cell functions, we compared interferon γ production, degranulation, and proliferation of CD8+ T cells in response to M. tuberculosis peptides (ESAT-6/CFP-10) between HIV-infected (median CD4+ T-cell count, 522 cells/µL; interquartile range, 318-585 cells/µL) and HIV-uninfected individuals with latent tuberculosis from South Africa. We found that M. tuberculosis-specific degranulation and proliferative capacities were impaired in the HIV-infected group. Thus, our results suggest that HIV coinfection compromises CD8+ T-cell functions in latent tuberculosis.

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