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The effect of induction immunosuppression for kidney transplant on the latent HIV reservoir

Authors :
Sarah E. Benner
Yolanda Eby
Xianming Zhu
Reinaldo E. Fernandez
Eshan U. Patel
Jessica E. Ruff
Feben Habtehyimer
Haley A. Schmidt
Charles S. Kirby
Sarah Hussain
Darin Ostrander
Niraj M. Desai
Sander Florman
Meenakshi M. Rana
Rachel Friedman-Moraco
Marcus R. Pereira
Shikha Mehta
Peter Stock
Alexander Gilbert
Michele I. Morris
Valentina Stosor
Sapna A. Mehta
Catherine B. Small
Karthik Ranganna
Carlos A.Q. Santos
Saima Aslam
Jennifer Husson
Maricar Malinis
Nahel Elias
Emily A. Blumberg
Brianna L. Doby
Allan B. Massie
Melissa L. Smith
Jonah Odim
Thomas C. Quinn
Gregory M. Laird
Robert F. Siliciano
Dorry L. Segev
Andrew D. Redd
Christine M. Durand
Aaron A.R. Tobian
Source :
JCI Insight. 7
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2022.

Abstract

The HIV latent viral reservoir (LVR) remains a major challenge in the effort to find a cure for HIV. There is interest in lymphocyte-depleting agents, used in solid organ and bone marrow transplantation to reduce the LVR. This study evaluated the LVR and T cell receptor repertoire in HIV-infected kidney transplant recipients using intact proviral DNA assay and T cell receptor sequencing in patients receiving lymphocyte-depleting or lymphocyte-nondepleting immunosuppression induction therapy. CD4+ T cells and intact and defective provirus frequencies decreased following lymphocyte-depleting induction therapy but rebounded to near baseline levels within 1 year after induction. In contrast, these biomarkers were relatively stable over time in the lymphocyte-nondepleting group. The lymphocyte-depleting group had early TCRβ repertoire turnover and newly detected and expanded clones compared with the lymphocyte-nondepleting group. No differences were observed in TCRβ clonality and repertoire richness between groups. These findings suggest that, even with significant decreases in the overall size of the circulating LVR, the reservoir can be reconstituted in a relatively short period of time. These results, while from a relatively unique population, suggest that curative strategies aimed at depleting the HIV LVR will need to achieve specific and durable levels of HIV-infected T cell depletion.

Details

ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCI Insight
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46147a82045a00e333c6d661a75c5fa7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.162968