Cell Reports (Apr 2024)

Identification of macaque dendritic cell precursors in blood and tissue reveals their dysregulation in early SIV infection

  • Margaux Gardet,
  • Oscar Haigh,
  • Florian Meurisse,
  • Sixtine Coindre,
  • Nastasia Dimant,
  • Delphine Desjardins,
  • Christine Bourgeois,
  • Cecile Goujard,
  • Bruno Vaslin,
  • Francis Relouzat,
  • Roger Le Grand,
  • Olivier Lambotte,
  • Benoit Favier

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 4
p. 113994

Abstract

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Summary: Distinct dendritic cell (DC) subsets play important roles in shaping immune responses. Circulating DC precursors (pre-DCs) are more susceptible to HIV infection in vitro, which may explain the inefficiency of immune responses against HIV. However, the interplay between HIV and pre-DC is not defined in vivo. We identify human pre-DC equivalents in the cynomolgus macaque and then analyze their dynamics during simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection to illustrate a sharp decrease of blood pre-DCs in early SIV infection and accumulation in lymph nodes (LNs), where they neglect to upregulate CD83/CD86 or MHC-II. Additionally, SIV infection attenuates the capacity of stimulated LN pre-DCs to produce IL-12p40. Analysis of HIV cohorts provides correlation between costimulatory molecule expression on pre-DCs and T cell activation in spontaneous HIV controllers. These findings pinpoint certain dynamics and functional changes of pre-DCs during SIV infection, providing a deeper understanding of immune dysregulation mechanisms elicited in people living with HIV.

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