Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

TGF-β blockade drives a transitional effector phenotype in T cells reversing SIV latency and decreasing SIV reservoirs in vivo

  • Jinhee Kim,
  • Deepanwita Bose,
  • Mariluz Araínga,
  • Muhammad R. Haque,
  • Christine M. Fennessey,
  • Rachel A. Caddell,
  • Yanique Thomas,
  • Douglas E. Ferrell,
  • Syed Ali,
  • Emanuelle Grody,
  • Yogesh Goyal,
  • Claudia Cicala,
  • James Arthos,
  • Brandon F. Keele,
  • Monica Vaccari,
  • Ramon Lorenzo-Redondo,
  • Thomas J. Hope,
  • Francois Villinger,
  • Elena Martinelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45555-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract HIV-1 persistence during ART is due to the establishment of long-lived viral reservoirs in resting immune cells. Using an NHP model of barcoded SIVmac239 intravenous infection and therapeutic dosing of anti-TGFBR1 inhibitor galunisertib (LY2157299), we confirm the latency reversal properties of in vivo TGF-β blockade, decrease viral reservoirs and stimulate immune responses. Treatment of eight female, SIV-infected macaques on ART with four 2-weeks cycles of galunisertib leads to viral reactivation as indicated by plasma viral load and immunoPET/CT with a 64Cu-DOTA-F(ab’)2-p7D3-probe. Post-galunisertib, lymph nodes, gut and PBMC exhibit lower cell-associated (CA-)SIV DNA and lower intact pro-virus (PBMC). Galunisertib does not lead to systemic increase in inflammatory cytokines. High-dimensional cytometry, bulk, and single-cell (sc)RNAseq reveal a galunisertib-driven shift toward an effector phenotype in T and NK cells characterized by a progressive downregulation in TCF1. In summary, we demonstrate that galunisertib, a clinical stage TGF-β inhibitor, reverses SIV latency and decreases SIV reservoirs by driving T cells toward an effector phenotype, enhancing immune responses in vivo in absence of toxicity.