Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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immunology and microbiology

Association of HIV-specific and total CD8+ T memory phenotypes in subtype C HIV-1 infection with viral set point

Journal of Immunology, Volume 182, No. 8, Year 2009

Understanding early immunological events during HIV-1 infection that may set the course of disease progression is important for identifying correlates of viral control. This study explores the association of differentiation profiles of HIV-specific and total memory CD8+ T cells with viral set point. A cohort of 47 HIV-1-infected individuals, with differing viral set points at 12 mo, were recruited during acute infection. We identified that the magnitude of IFN-γ+ T cell responses at 6 mo postinfection did not associate with viral set point at 12 mo. A subset of 16 individuals was further studied to characterize CD8+ T cells for expression patterns of markers for memory differentiation, survival (CD127), senescence (CD57), and negative regulation (programmed death-1). We show that viral control and the predicted tempo of HIV disease progression in the first year of infection was associated with a synchronous differentiation of HIV-specific and total CD8+ memory subpopulations. At 6-9 mo postinfection, those with low viral set points had a significantly higher proportion of early differentiated HIV-specific and total memory CD8+ cells of a central memory (CD45RO +CD27+CCR7+) and intermediate memory (CD45RO-CD27+CCR7-) phenotype. Those with high viral set points possessed significantly larger frequencies of effector memory (CD45RO+CD27-CCR7-) cells. The proportions of memory subsets significantly correlated with CD38+CD8+ T cells. Thus, it is likely that a high Ag burden resulting in generalized immune activation may drive differentiation of HIV-specific and total memory CD8 + T cells.
Statistics
Citations: 92
Authors: 14
Affiliations: 6
Identifiers
Research Areas
Infectious Diseases
Study Design
Cohort Study