PLoS Pathogens (Jan 2014)

Loss of circulating CD4 T cells with B cell helper function during chronic HIV infection.

  • Kristin L Boswell,
  • Robert Paris,
  • Eli Boritz,
  • David Ambrozak,
  • Takuya Yamamoto,
  • Sam Darko,
  • Kaska Wloka,
  • Adam Wheatley,
  • Sandeep Narpala,
  • Adrian McDermott,
  • Mario Roederer,
  • Richard Haubrich,
  • Mark Connors,
  • Julie Ake,
  • Daniel C Douek,
  • Jerome Kim,
  • Constantinos Petrovas,
  • Richard A Koup

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003853
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. e1003853

Abstract

Read online

The interaction between follicular T helper cells (TFH) and B cells in the lymph nodes and spleen has a major impact on the development of antigen-specific B cell responses during infection or vaccination. Recent studies described a functional equivalent of these cells among circulating CD4 T cells, referred to as peripheral TFH cells. Here, we characterize the phenotype and in vitro B cell helper activity of peripheral TFH populations, as well as the effect of HIV infection on these populations. In co-culture experiments we confirmed CXCR5+ cells from HIV-uninfected donors provide help to B cells and more specifically, we identified a CCR7(high)CXCR5(high)CCR6(high)PD-1(high) CD4 T cell population that secretes IL-21 and enhances isotype-switched immunoglobulin production. This population is significantly decreased in treatment-naïve, HIV-infected individuals and can be recovered after anti-retroviral therapy. We found impaired immunoglobulin production in co-cultures from HIV-infected individuals and found no correlation between the frequency of peripheral TFH cells and memory B cells, or with neutralization activity in untreated HIV infection in our cohort. Furthermore, we found that within the peripheral TFH population, the expression level of TFH-associated genes more closely resembles a memory, non-TFH population, as opposed to a TFH population. Overall, our data identify a heterogeneous population of circulating CD4 T cells that provides in vitro help to B cells, and challenges the origin of these cells as memory TFH cells.