PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

A low T regulatory cell response may contribute to both viral control and generalized immune activation in HIV controllers.

  • Peter W Hunt,
  • Alan L Landay,
  • Elizabeth Sinclair,
  • Jeffrey A Martinson,
  • Hiroyu Hatano,
  • Brinda Emu,
  • Philip J Norris,
  • Michael P Busch,
  • Jeffrey N Martin,
  • Cicely Brooks,
  • Joseph M McCune,
  • Steven G Deeks

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015924
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. e15924

Abstract

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HIV-infected individuals maintaining undetectable viremia in the absence of therapy (HIV controllers) often maintain high HIV-specific T cell responses, which has spurred the development of vaccines eliciting HIV-specific T cell responses. However, controllers also often have abnormally high T cell activation levels, potentially contributing to T cell dysfunction, CD4+ T cell depletion, and non-AIDS morbidity. We hypothesized that a weak T regulatory cell (Treg) response might contribute to the control of viral replication in HIV controllers, but might also contribute to generalized immune activation, contributing to CD4+ T cell loss. To address these hypotheses, we measured frequencies of activated (CD38+ HLA-DR+), regulatory (CD4+CD25+CD127(dim)), HIV-specific, and CMV-specific T cells among HIV controllers and 3 control populations: HIV-infected individuals with treatment-mediated viral suppression (ART-suppressed), untreated HIV-infected "non-controllers" with high levels of viremia, and HIV-uninfected individuals. Despite abnormally high T cell activation levels, controllers had lower Treg frequencies than HIV-uninfected controls (P = 0.014). Supporting the propensity for an unusually low Treg response to viral infection in HIV controllers, we observed unusually high CMV-specific CD4+ T cell frequencies and a strong correlation between HIV-specific CD4+ T cell responses and generalized CD8+ T cell activation levels in HIV controllers (P ≤ 0.001). These data support a model in which low frequencies of Tregs in HIV controllers may contribute to an effective adaptive immune response, but may also contribute to generalized immune activation, potentially contributing to CD4 depletion.