Abstract

BackgroundDepletion of mucosal Th17 cells during HIV/SIV infections is a major cause for microbial translocation, chronic immune activation, and disease progression. Mechanisms contributing to Th17 deficit are not fully elucidated. Here we investigated alterations in the Th17 polarization potential of naive-like CD4+ T-cells, depletion of Th17-commited subsets during HIV pathogenesis, and Th17 restoration in response to antiretroviral therapy (ART).ResultsPeripheral blood CD4+ T-cells expressing a naive-like phenotype (CD45RA+CCR7+) from chronically HIV-infected subjects receiving ART (CI on ART; median CD4 counts 592 cells/μl; viral load: <50 HIV-RNA copies/ml; time since infection: 156 months) compared to uninfected controls (HIV-) were impaired in their survival and Th17 polarization potential in vitro. In HIV- controls, IL-17A-producing cells mainly originated from naive-like T-cells with a regulatory phenotype (nTregs: CD25highCD127−FoxP3+) and from CD25+CD127+FoxP3− cells (DP, double positive). Th17-polarized conventional naive CD4+ T-cells (nT: CD25−CD127+FoxP3−) also produced IL17A, but at lower frequency compared to nTregs and DP. In CI on ART subjects, the frequency/counts of nTreg and DP were significantly diminished compared to HIV- controls, and this paucity was further associated with decreased proportions of memory T-cells producing IL-17A and expressing Th17 markers (CCR6+CD26+CD161+, mTh17). nTregs and DP compared to nT cells harbored superior levels of integrated/non-integrated HIV-DNA in CI on ART subjects, suggesting that permissiveness to integrative/abortive infection contributes to impaired survival and Th17 polarization of lineage-committed cells. A cross-sectional study in CI on ART subjects revealed that nTregs, DP and mTh17 counts were negatively correlated with the time post-infection ART was initiated and positively correlated with nadir CD4 counts. Finally, a longitudinal analysis in a HIV primary infection cohort demonstrated a tendency for increased nTreg, DP, and mTh17 counts with ART initiation during the first year of infection.ConclusionsThese results support a model in which the paucity of phenotypically naive nTregs and DP cells, caused by integrative/abortive HIV infection and/or other mechanisms, contributes to Th17 deficiency in HIV-infected subjects. Early ART initiation, treatment intensification with integrase inhibitors, and/or other alternative interventions aimed at preserving/restoring the pool of cells prone to acquire Th17 functions may significantly improve mucosal immunity in HIV-infected subjects.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12977-015-0164-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Depletion of mucosal Th17 cells during HIV/SIV infections is a major cause for microbial translocation, chronic immune activation, and disease progression

  • These results support a model in which the paucity of phenotypically naive nTregs and DP cells, caused by integrative/abortive HIV infection and/or other mechanisms, contributes to Th17 deficiency in HIV-uninfected controls (HIV-)infected subjects

  • Naive CD4+ T-cells from HIV-infected subjects are impaired in their Th17 polarization potential in vitro

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Summary

Introduction

Depletion of mucosal Th17 cells during HIV/SIV infections is a major cause for microbial translocation, chronic immune activation, and disease progression. T-cells, Th17 cells are preferentially depleted from the GALT of HIV-infected individuals with rapid disease progression [4,5]. Th17 cell depletion from the GALT of HIV-infected subjects and SIV-infected rhesus macaques is considered to be a major cause for microbial translocation, chronic immune activation, and disease progression [3,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Very recent studies demonstrated that ART initiation during the early acute phases of HIV infection (Fiebig I-II), but not during the late acute and chronic phases, permits the preservation of Th17 cell numbers/functions at mucosal level [16]. The challenges of early HIV diagnosis render immediate ART initiation almost utopic even in high income countries

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