Pregnancy Gestation Impacts on HIV-1-Specific Granzyme B Response and Central Memory CD4 T Cells

被引:1
|
作者
Cocker, Alexander T. H. [1 ]
Shah, Nishel M. [1 ]
Raj, Inez [2 ]
Dermont, Sarah [2 ]
Khan, Waheed [2 ]
Mandalia, Sundhiya [1 ]
Imami, Nesrina [1 ]
Johnson, Mark R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Imperial Coll London, London, England
[2] Chelsea & Westminster Hosp, London, England
来源
FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY | 2020年 / 11卷
关键词
HIV-1; pregnancy; T-cell responses; Gag and Nef; immunity; reproduction; INFLUENZA-A VIRUS; ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; VIRAL LOAD; HIV-1; INFECTION; PHARMACOKINETICS; ASSOCIATION; LYMPHOCYTES; EXPRESSION; VIREMIA; BLOOD;
D O I
10.3389/fimmu.2020.00153
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Pregnancy induces alterations in peripheral T-cell populations with both changes in subset frequencies and anti-viral responses found to alter with gestation. In HIV-1 positive women anti-HIV-1 responses are associated with transmission risk, however detailed investigation into both HIV-1-specific memory responses associated with HIV-1 control and T-cell subset changes during pregnancy have not been undertaken. In this study we aimed to define pregnancy and gestation related changes to HIV-1-specific responses and T-cell phenotype in ART treated HIV-1 positive pregnant women. Eleven non-pregnant and 24 pregnant HIV-1 positive women were recruited, peripheral blood samples taken, fresh cells isolated, and compared using ELISpot assays and flow cytometry analysis. Clinical data were collected as part of standard care, and non-parametric statistics used. Alterations in induced IFN gamma, IL-2, IL-10, and granzyme B secretion by peripheral blood mononuclear cells in response to HIV-1 Gag and Nef peptide pools and changes in T-cell subsets between pregnant and non-pregnant women were assessed, with data correlated with participant clinical parameters and longitudinal analysis performed. Cross-sectional comparison identified decreased IL-10 Nef response in HIV-1 positive pregnant women compared to non-pregnant, while correlations exhibited reversed Gag and Nef cytokine and protease response associations between groups. Longitudinal analysis of pregnant participants demonstrated transient increases in Gag granzyme B response and in the central memory CD4 T-cell subset frequency during their second trimester, with a decrease in CD4 effector memory T cells from their second to third trimester. Gag and Nef HIV-1-specific responses diverge with pregnancy time-point, coinciding with relevant T-cell phenotype, and gestation associated immunological adaptations. Decreased IL-10 Nef and both increased granzyme B Gag response and central memory CD4 T cells implies that amplified antigen production is occurring, which suggests a period of compromised HIV-1 control in pregnancy.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Modulation of cytolytic activity of CD8+T cells by HIV-1-specific IL21+CD4+T cells
    Chevalier, M.
    Julg, B.
    Pyo, A.
    Flanders, M.
    Ranasinghe, S.
    Mueller, M.
    Kwon, D.
    Rychert, J.
    Lian, J.
    Altfeld, M.
    Walker, B.
    Streeck, H.
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2010, 26 (10) : A6 - A6
  • [22] Central Memory CD4 T Cells from Persons with HIV Accumulate DNA Content Defects During Proliferative Response
    Romero-Rodriguez, Damaris P.
    Romero-Rodriguez, Jessica
    Cervantes-Mejia, Fernanda
    Olvera-Garcia, Gustavo
    Perez-Patrigeon, Santiago
    Murakami-Ogasawara, Akio
    Romero-Mora, Karla
    Gomez-Palacio, Maria
    Reyes-Teran, Gustavo
    Jiang, Wei
    Espinosa, Enrique
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2025, 41 (01) : 37 - 42
  • [23] Infection of HIV-specific CD4 T helper cells and the clonal composition of the response
    Roy, Sarah M.
    Wodarz, Dominik
    JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2012, 304 : 143 - 151
  • [24] Reactivation Kinetics of HIV-1 and Susceptibility of Reactivated Latently Infected CD4+ T Cells to HIV-1-Specific CD8+ T Cells
    Walker-Sperling, Victoria E. K.
    Cohen, Valerie J.
    Tarwater, Patrick M.
    Blankson, Joel N.
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2015, 89 (18) : 9631 - 9638
  • [25] Detection and enumeration of circulating HIV-1-specific memory B cells in HIV-1-infected patients
    Fondere, JM
    Huguet, MF
    Macura-Biegun, A
    Baillat, V
    Ohayon, V
    Reynes, J
    Vendrell, JP
    JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2004, 35 (02) : 114 - 119
  • [26] Activation of HIV-1-specific CD8+ and CD4+ autologous memory T-cells by dendritic cells and B-cells electroporated with mRNA encoding consensus or autologous HIV-1 proteins.
    Berneman, ZN
    Van Gulck, ERA
    Van den Bosch, G
    Ponsaerts, P
    Heyndrickx, L
    Moerman, F
    De Roo, A
    Lenjou, M
    Nijs, G
    Van Bockstaele, DR
    Van Tendeloo, VFI
    Maranon, C
    Hosmalin, A
    Vanham, G
    BLOOD, 2005, 106 (11) : 99A - 99A
  • [27] HIV-1 infection of CD4 T cells impairs antigen-specific B cell function
    Kaw, Sheetal
    Ananth, Swetha
    Tsopoulidis, Nikolaos
    Morath, Katharina
    Coban, Bahar M.
    Hohenberger, Ralph
    Bulut, Olcay C.
    Klein, Florian
    Stolp, Bettina
    Fackler, Oliver T.
    EMBO JOURNAL, 2020, 39 (24):
  • [28] In Vitro Priming of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T Cells from Naive T Cells
    Kuse, Nozomi
    Sun, Xiaoming
    Akahoshi, Tomohiro
    Lissina, Anna
    Appay, Victor
    Takiguchi, Masafumi
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2016, 32 : 171 - 171
  • [29] Memory CD4 T Cells in Influenza
    Zens, Kyra D.
    Farber, Donna L.
    INFLUENZA PATHOGENESIS AND CONTROL - VOL II, 2015, 386 : 399 - 421
  • [30] Responsiveness of HIV-specific CD4 T cells to PD-1 blockade
    Porichis, Filippos
    Kwon, Douglas S.
    Zupkosky, Jennifer
    Tighe, Daniel P.
    McMullen, Ashley
    Brockman, Mark A.
    Pavlik, David F.
    Rodriguez-Garcia, Marta
    Pereyra, Florencia
    Freeman, Gordon J.
    Kavanagh, Daniel G.
    Kaufmann, Daniel E.
    BLOOD, 2011, 118 (04) : 965 - 974