PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

IL-10-producing B cells are induced early in HIV-1 infection and suppress HIV-1-specific T cell responses.

  • Jun Liu,
  • Wei Zhan,
  • Connie J Kim,
  • Kiera Clayton,
  • Hanqi Zhao,
  • Erika Lee,
  • Jin Chao Cao,
  • Blake Ziegler,
  • Alexander Gregor,
  • Feng Yun Yue,
  • Sanja Huibner,
  • Sonya MacParland,
  • Jordan Schwartz,
  • Hai Han Song,
  • Erika Benko,
  • Gabor Gyenes,
  • Colin Kovacs,
  • Rupert Kaul,
  • Mario Ostrowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e89236

Abstract

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A rare subset of IL-10-producing B cells, named regulatory B cells (Bregs), suppresses adaptive immune responses and inflammation in mice. In this study, we examined the role of IL-10-producing B cells in HIV-1 infection. Compared to uninfected controls, IL-10-producing B cell frequencies were elevated in both blood and sigmoid colon during the early and chronic phase of untreated HIV-1 infection. Ex vivo IL-10-producing B cell frequency in early HIV-1 infection directly correlated with viral load. IL-10-producing B cells from HIV-1 infected individuals were enriched in CD19(+)TIM-1(+) B cells and were enriched for specificity to trimeric HIV-1 envelope protein. Anti-retroviral therapy was associated with reduced IL-10-producing B cell frequencies. Treatment of B cells from healthy donors with microbial metabolites and Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists could induce an IL-10 producing phenotype, suggesting that the elevated bacterial translocation characteristic of HIV-1 infection may promote IL-10-producing B cell development. Similar to regulatory B cells found in mice, IL-10-producing B cells from HIV-1-infected individuals suppressed HIV-1-specific T cell responses in vitro, and this suppression is IL-10-dependent. Also, ex vivo IL-10-producing B cell frequency inversely correlated with contemporaneous ex vivo HIV-1-specific T cell responses. Our findings show that IL-10-producing B cells are induced early in HIV-1 infection, can be HIV-1 specific, and are able to inhibit effective anti-HIV-1 T cell responses. HIV-1 may dysregulate B cells toward Bregs as an immune evasion strategy.