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Near normalization of peripheral blood markers in HIV-infected patients on long-term suppressive antiretroviral therapy: a case-control study.

Authors :
Brochado-Kith O
Martinez I
Berenguer J
Medrano LM
González-García J
Garcia-Broncano P
Jiménez-Sousa MÁ
Carrero A
Hontañón V
Muñoz-Fernández MÁ
Fernández-Rodríguez A
Resino S
Source :
AIDS (London, England) [AIDS] 2020 Nov 01; Vol. 34 (13), pp. 1891-1897.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective: To explore the differences in peripheral blood markers between HIV well controlled patients on long-term suppressive antiretroviral therapy (HIV-group) and age-matched healthy controls, to evaluate the benefits of virological suppression in those patients.<br />Methods: We performed a case-control study in 22 individuals in the HIV-group and 14 in the healthy control-group. RNA-seq analysis was performed from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Peripheral blood T-cell subsets were evaluated by flow cytometry and plasma biomarkers by immunoassays. All P values were corrected by the false discovery rate (q values).<br />Results: Only the serine/arginine repetitive matrix 4 gene, which is involved in alternative RNA splicing events, was differentially expressed between HIV and healthy control groups (q value ≤0.05 and fold-change ≥2). However, 147 differentially expressed genes were found with a more relaxed threshold (P value ≤0.05 and fold-change ≥1.5), of which 67 genes with values of variable importance in projection at least one were selected for pathway analysis. We found that six ribosomal genes represented significant ribosome-related pathways, all of them downregulated in the HIV-group, which may be a strategy to facilitate viral production. T cells subset and plasma biomarkers did not show significant differences after false discovery rate correction (q value >0.05), but a noncorrected analysis showed higher values of regulatory CD4 T cells (CD4CD25CD127), MCP-1, and sVEGF-R1 in the HIV-group (P value ≤0.05).<br />Conclusion: T-cell subsets, plasma biomarkers, and gene expression were close to normalization in HIV-infected patients on long-term suppressive combination antiretroviral therapy compared with healthy controls. However, residual alterations remain, mainly at the gene expression, which still reveals the impact of HIV infection in these patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1473-5571
Volume :
34
Issue :
13
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
AIDS (London, England)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32796212
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000002645