scholarly journals Prime, Shock, and Kill: Priming CD4 T Cells from HIV Patients with a BCL-2 Antagonist before HIV Reactivation Reduces HIV Reservoir Size

2016 ◽  
Vol 90 (8) ◽  
pp. 4032-4048 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan W. Cummins ◽  
Amy M. Sainski ◽  
Haiming Dai ◽  
Sekar Natesampillai ◽  
Yuan-Ping Pang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTUnderstanding how some HIV-infected cells resist the cytotoxicity of HIV replication is crucial to enabling HIV cure efforts. HIV killing of CD4 T cells that replicate HIV can involve HIV protease-mediated cleavage of procaspase 8 to generate a fragment (Casp8p41) that directly binds and activates the mitochondrial proapoptotic protein BAK. Here, we demonstrate that Casp8p41 also binds with nanomolar affinity to the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2, which sequesters Casp8p41 and prevents apoptosis. Further, we show that central memory CD4 T cells (TCM) from HIV-infected individuals have heightened expression of BCL-2 relative to procaspase 8, possibly explaining the persistence of HIV-infected TCMdespite generation of Casp8p41. Consistent with this hypothesis, the selective BCL-2 antagonist venetoclax induced minimal killing of uninfected CD4 T cells but markedly increased the death of CD4 T cells and diminished cell-associated HIV DNA when CD4 T cells from antiretroviral therapy (ART)-suppressed HIV patients were induced with αCD3/αCD28 to reactivate HIVex vivo. Thus, priming CD4 T cells from ART suppressed HIV patients with a BCL-2 antagonist, followed by HIV reactivation, achieves reductions in cell-associated HIV DNA, whereas HIV reactivation alone does not.IMPORTANCEHIV infection is incurable due to a long-lived reservoir of HIV+memory CD4 T cells, and no clinically relevant interventions have been identified that reduce the number of these HIV DNA-containing cells. Since postintegration HIV replication can result in HIV protease generation of Casp8p41, which activates BAK, causing infected CD4 T cell death, we sought to determine whether this occurs in memory CD4 T cells. Here, we demonstrate that memory CD4 T cells can generate Casp8p41 and yet are intrinsically resistant to death induced by diverse stimuli, including Casp8p41. Furthermore, BCL-2 expression is relatively increased in these cells and directly binds and inhibits Casp8p41's proapoptotic effects. Antagonizing BCL-2 with venetoclax derepresses this antagonism, resulting in death, preferentially in HIV DNA containing cells, since only these cells generate Casp8p41. Thus, BCL-2 antagonism is a clinically relevant intervention with the potential to reduce HIV reservoir size in patients.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florencia A. T. Boshier ◽  
Daniel B. Reeves ◽  
Elizabeth R. Duke ◽  
David A. Swan ◽  
Martin Prlic ◽  
...  

AbstractThe HIV reservoir is a population of 1-10 million anatomically dispersed, latently infected memory CD4+ T cells in which an HIV DNA molecule is quiescently integrated into human chromosomal DNA. When antiretroviral therapy (ART) is stopped and HIV replication initiates in one of these cells, systemic viral spread resumes, rekindling progression to AIDS. Therefore, HIV latency prevents cure. The HIV reservoir contains clones: identical HIV sequences that are integrated within identical human chromosomal DNA locations. The presence of these clones demonstrates that proliferation of CD4+ T cells sustains infection despite ART. The reservoir has a precise structure consisting of a small number of large clones and a large number of small clones. However, the mechanisms leading to this structure have not been identified. We developed a mathematical model that recapitulates the profound depletion and brisk recovery of CD4+ T cells, reservoir creation, and viral load trajectory during primary HIV infection. We extended the model to simulate stochastically individual HIV reservoir clones and identified that uneven proliferation among clones during recovery from CD4+ lymphopaenia is sufficient to explain the observed clonal reservoir distribution. We project that within one month of infection 75-95% of reservoir cells are generated from cellular proliferation rather than denovo viral infection. Recent detection of HIV infected clones during the first 5 weeks of infection support our model’s predictions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 176-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Tanaskovic ◽  
Sonia Fernandez ◽  
Henny Saraswati ◽  
Evy Yunihastuti ◽  
Rino A. Gani ◽  
...  

2004 ◽  
Vol 78 (13) ◽  
pp. 7284-7287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michaela Lucas ◽  
Cheryl L. Day ◽  
Jessica R. Wyer ◽  
Sharon L. Cunliffe ◽  
Andrew Loughry ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Recent advances in class II tetramer staining technology have allowed reliable direct ex vivo visualization of antigen-specific CD4 T cells. In order to define the frequency and phenotype of a prototype response to a nonpersistent pathogen, we have used such techniques to analyze influenza virus-specific memory CD4 T cells directly from blood. These responses are stably detectable ex vivo at low frequencies (range, 0.00012 to 0.0061% of CD4 T cells) and display a distinct “central memory” CD62L+ phenotype.


2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. O2 ◽  
Author(s):  
KK Koelsch ◽  
Y Xu ◽  
M Bailey ◽  
K McBride ◽  
N Seddiki ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Thomas Ray O'Neil ◽  
Kevin Hu ◽  
Naomi Truong ◽  
Sana Arshad ◽  
Barbara Shacklett ◽  
...  

Tissue resident memory T cells (TRM) were first described in 2009. While initially the major focus was on CD8 TRM, there has been recently an increased interest in defining the phenotype and the role of CD4 TRM in diseases. Circulating CD4 T cells seed tissue CD4 TRM, but there also appears to be an equilibrium between CD4 TRM and blood CD4 T cells. CD4 TRM are more mobile than CD8 TRM, usually localized deeper within the dermis/lamina propria and yet may exhibit synergy with CD8 TRM in disease control. This has been demonstrated in herpes simplex infections in mice. In human recurrent herpes infections, both CD4 and CD8 TRM persisting between lesions may control asymptomatic shedding through interferon gamma secretion, although this has been more clearly shown for CD8 T cells. The exact role of the CD4/CD8 TRM axis in the trigeminal ganglia and/or cornea in controlling recurrent herpetic keratitis is unknown. In HIV, CD4 TRM have now been shown to be a major target for productive and latent infection in cervix. In HSV and HIV co-infections, CD4 TRM persisting in the dermis support HIV replication. Further understanding of the role of CD4 TRM and their induction by vaccines may help control sexual transmission by both viruses.


Virology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 462-463 ◽  
pp. 175-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob Couturier ◽  
Alexander T. Hutchison ◽  
Miguel A. Medina ◽  
Cosmina Gingaras ◽  
Petri Urvil ◽  
...  

AIDS ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 1511-1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Khoury ◽  
Jenny L. Anderson ◽  
Rémi Fromentin ◽  
Wendy Hartogenesis ◽  
Miranda Z. Smith ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob Couturier ◽  
Aaron F. Orozco ◽  
Hongbing Liu ◽  
Sona Budhiraja ◽  
Edward B. Siwak ◽  
...  

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