PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

CD8 T-cells from most HIV-infected patients lack ex vivo HIV-suppressive capacity during acute and early infection.

  • Camille Lécuroux,
  • Isabelle Girault,
  • Antoine Chéret,
  • Pierre Versmisse,
  • Georges Nembot,
  • Laurence Meyer,
  • Christine Rouzioux,
  • Gianfranco Pancino,
  • Alain Venet,
  • Asier Sáez-Cirión,
  • ANRS 147 OPTIPRIM clinical trial

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059767
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e59767

Abstract

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The strong CD8+ T-cell-mediated HIV-1-suppressive capacity found in a minority of HIV-infected patients in chronic infection is associated with spontaneous control of viremia. However, it is still unclear whether such capacities were also present earlier in the CD8+ T cells from non controller patients and then lost as a consequence of uncontrolled viral replication. We studied 50 patients with primary HIV-1-infection to determine whether strong CD8+ T-cell-mediated HIV suppression is more often observed at that time. Despite high frequencies of polyfunctional HIV-specific CD8+ T-cells and a strong CD4+ T-helper response, CD8+ T-cells from 48 patients lacked strong HIV-suppressive capacities ex vivo. This indicates that the superior HIV-suppressive capacity of CD8+ T-cells from HIV controllers is not a general characteristic of the HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response in primary HIV infection.