PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Reconstitution of intestinal CD4 and Th17 T cells in antiretroviral therapy suppressed HIV-infected subjects: implication for residual immune activation from the results of a clinical trial.

  • Gabriella d'Ettorre,
  • Silvia Baroncelli,
  • Luca Micci,
  • Giancarlo Ceccarelli,
  • Mauro Andreotti,
  • Prachi Sharma,
  • Gianfranco Fanello,
  • Fausto Fiocca,
  • Eugenio Nelson Cavallari,
  • Noemi Giustini,
  • Alessandra Mallano,
  • Clementina M Galluzzo,
  • Stefano Vella,
  • Claudio M Mastroianni,
  • Guido Silvestri,
  • Mirko Paiardini,
  • Vincenzo Vullo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109791
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e109791

Abstract

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During HIV infection the severe depletion of intestinal CD4+ T-cells is associated with microbial translocation, systemic immune activation, and disease progression. This study examined intestinal and peripheral CD4+ T-cell subsets reconstitution under combined antiretroviral therapy (cART), and systemic immune activation markers.This longitudinal single-arm pilot study evaluates CD4+ T cells, including Th1 and Th17, in gut and blood and soluble markers for inflammation in HIV-infected individuals before (M0) and after eight (M8) months of cART. From January 2010 to December 2011, 10 HIV-1 naïve patients were screened and 9 enrolled. Blood and gut CD4+ T-cells subsets and cellular immune activation were determined by flow-cytometry and plasma soluble CD14 by ELISA. CD4+ Th17 cells were detected in gut biopsies by immunohistochemistry. Microbial translocation was measured by limulus-amebocyte-lysate assay to detect bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and PCR Real Time to detect plasma bacterial 16S rDNA.Eight months of cART increased intestinal CD4+ and Th17 cells and reduced levels of T-cell activation and proliferation. The magnitude of intestinal CD4+ T-cell reconstitution correlated with the reduction of plasma LPS. Importantly, the magnitude of Th17 cells reconstitution correlated directly with blood CD4+ T-cell recovery.Short-term antiretroviral therapy resulted in a significant increase in the levels of total and Th17 CD4+ T-cells in the gut mucosa and in decline of T-cell activation. The observation that pre-treatment levels of CD4+ and of CD8+ T-cell activation are predictors of the magnitude of Th17 cell reconstitution following cART provides further rationale for an early initiation of cART in HIV-infected individuals.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02097381.