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Elevated CD4 + T-cell glucose metabolism in HIV+ women with diabetes mellitus

Authors :
Tiffany R. Butterfield
David B. Hanna
Robert C. Kaplan
Xiaonan Xue
Jorge R. Kizer
Helen G. Durkin
Seble G. Kassaye
Marek Nowicki
Phyllis C. Tien
Elizabeth T. Topper
Michelle A. Floris-Moore
Kehmia Titanji
Margaret A. Fischl
Sonya Heath
Clovis S. Palmer
Alan L. Landay
Joshua J. Anzinger
Source :
AIDS (London, England). 36(10)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Immune dysfunction and chronic inflammation are characteristic of HIV infection and diabetes mellitus, with CD4 + T-cell metabolism implicated in the pathogenesis of each disease. However, there is limited information on CD4 + T-cell metabolism in HIV+ persons with diabetes mellitus. We examined CD4 + T-cell glucose metabolism in HIV+ women with and without diabetes mellitus.A case-control study was used to compare CD4 + T-cell glucose metabolism in women with HIV with or without diabetes mellitus.Nondiabetic (HIV+DM-, N = 20) or type 2 diabetic HIV+ women with (HIV+DM+, N = 16) or without (HIV+DMTx+, N = 18) antidiabetic treatment were identified from the WIHS and matched for age, race/ethnicity, smoking status and CD4 + cell count. CD4 + T-cell immunometabolism was examined by flow cytometry, microfluidic qRT-PCR of metabolic genes, and Seahorse extracellular flux analysis of stimulated CD4 + T cells.HIV+DM+ displayed a significantly elevated proportion of CD4 + T cells expressing the immunometabolic marker GLUT1 compared with HIV+DMTx+ and HIV+DM- ( P = 0.04 and P = 0.01, respectively). Relative expression of genes encoding key enzymes for glucose metabolism pathways were elevated in CD4 + T cells of HIV+DM+ compared with HIV+DMTx+ and HIV+DM-. T-cell receptor (TCR)-activated CD4 + T cells from HIV+DM+ showed elevated glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation compared with HIV+DM-.CD4 + T cells from HIV+DM+ have elevated glucose metabolism. Treatment of diabetes mellitus among women with HIV may partially correct CD4 + T-cell metabolic dysfunction.

Details

ISSN :
14735571
Volume :
36
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS (London, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....02de7cf6e9a5b0f5b54e534be39345f5