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Expansion of interferon-gamma-secreting HIV-specific T cells during successful antiretroviral therapy
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 2833195
Author(s) Gasser, O; Brander, C; Wolbers, M; Brown, N V; Rauch, A; Günthard, H F; Battegay, M; Hess, C; Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Author(s) at UniBasel Hess, Christoph
Battegay, Manuel E.
Year 2013
Title Expansion of interferon-gamma-secreting HIV-specific T cells during successful antiretroviral therapy
Journal HIV medicine
Volume 14
Number 4
Pages / Article-Number 241-6
Keywords antiretroviral therapy, HIV-specific T cells, T cell dynamics
Abstract OBJECTIVES: Antiretroviral therapy (ART) suppresses HIV viraemia, thereby reducing the antigenic drive for T cells to proliferate. Accordingly, selected HIV-specific T-cell responses have been described to contract within weeks of ART initiation. Here, we sought to investigate whether these findings apply to the entire repertoire of HIV-specific T cells. METHODS: Using interferon (IFN)-gamma enzyme linked immuno spot (ELISpot), we performed retrospective 2-year proteome-wide monitoring of HIV-specific T cells in 17 individuals with undetectable viral loads during ART. The sample pool for each study subject consisted of one pre-ART time-point and at least two time-points after initiation of therapy. RESULTS: Peripheral pools of HIV-specific T cells decreased nonsignificantly within the first 2 years under ART in our cohort of patients, in terms of both breadth and magnitude. However, in most cases, the seeming decrease masked ongoing expansion of individual HIV-specific T-cell responses. We detected synchronous contraction and expansion of T-cell responses - with different peptide specificities - in 12 out of 17 study participants during follow-up. Importantly, the observed expansions and contractions of individual HIV-specific T-cell responses reached similar ranges, supporting the biological relevance of our findings. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that successful ART enables both contraction and expansion of HIV-specific T-cell responses. Our results should prompt a renewed interest in HIV-specific T-cell dynamics under ART, in particular to elucidate the mechanisms that uncouple, to some extent, particular HIV-specific T-cell responses from variations in circulating antigen load and functionally characterize expanding/contracting T-cell populations beyond IFN-gamma secretion. Assuming that expanding HIV-specific T-cell responses under ART are protective and functional, harnessing those mechanisms may provide novel opportunities for assisting viral control in chronically infected individuals.
Publisher Blackwell
ISSN/ISBN 1464-2662
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6338505
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1111/j.1468-1293.2012.01040.x
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22934786
ISI-Number WOS:000315588400006
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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