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Cycling CD4+ T cells in HIV-infected immune nonresponders have mitochondrial dysfunction

Authors :
Michael L. Freeman
Carey L Shive
Soumya Panigrahi
Souheil-Antoine Younes
Konstantin V. Shmagel
Scott F. Sieg
Benigno Rodriguez
Aarthi Talla
Susan Pereira Ribeiro
Larisa B. Korolevskaya
Donald D. Anthony
Leonard H. Calabrese
Robert Balderas
Evgeniya V. Saidakova
Mark J. Cameron
Daniel C. Douek
Michael M. Lederman
Pushpa Pandiyan
Sophia Alison Zweig
Leonid Margolis
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 128:5083-5094
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2018.

Abstract

Immune nonresponder (INR) HIV-1-infected subjects are characterized by their inability to reconstitute the CD4+ T cell pool after antiretroviral therapy. This is linked to poor clinical outcome. Mechanisms underlying immune reconstitution failure are poorly understood, although, counterintuitively, INRs often have increased frequencies of circulating CD4+ T cells in the cell cycle. While cycling CD4+ T cells from healthy controls and HIV+ patients with restored CD4+ T cell numbers complete cell division in vitro, cycling CD4+ T cells from INRs do not. Here, we show that cells with the phenotype and transcriptional profile of Tregs were enriched among cycling cells in health and in HIV infection. Yet there were diminished frequencies and numbers of Tregs among cycling CD4+ T cells in INRs, and cycling CD4+ T cells from INR subjects displayed transcriptional profiles associated with the impaired development and maintenance of functional Tregs. Flow cytometric assessment of TGF-β activity confirmed the dysfunction of Tregs in INR subjects. Transcriptional profiling and flow cytometry revealed diminished mitochondrial fitness in Tregs among INRs, and cycling Tregs from INRs had low expression of the mitochondrial biogenesis regulators peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1-α (PGC1α) and transcription factor A for mitochondria (TFAM). In vitro exposure to IL-15 allowed cells to complete division, restored the expression of PGC1α and TFAM, and regenerated mitochondrial fitness in the cycling Tregs of INRs. Our data suggest that rescuing mitochondrial function could correct the immune dysfunction characteristic of Tregs in HIV-1-infected subjects who fail to restore CD4+ T cells during antiretroviral therapy.

Details

ISSN :
15588238 and 00219738
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0abefaecd0f82ee099f54338e6a5ab1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci120245