4.3 Article

Detectable Viral Load Aggravates Immunosenescence Features of CD8 T-Cell Subsets in Vertically HIV-Infected Children

Journal

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e318259254f

Keywords

HIV; immunosenescence; vertical HIV-infected children; CD8+T cells; viral load

Funding

  1. Spanish AIDS Research Network of Excellence (RIS
  2. Red de Investigacion en SIDA) [RD06/0006/0021, RD09/0076/00103, RD06/0006-0035]
  3. Fundacion para la Investigacion y la prevencion del SIDA en Espana (FIPSE) [240800/09, 300509]
  4. Comunidad de Madrid [S-SAL-0159-2006]
  5. FIS [PS09102669]
  6. Pediatric European Network for treatment of AIDS (PENTA)
  7. Consejeria de Salud of Junta de Andalucia [PI-0366/07]
  8. Consejeria de Innovacion, Ciencia y Empresa [P10-CTS-6313]
  9. Fondos de Investigacion Sanitaria (FIS) [CP07/00240, CP07/00117, CP08/0172]
  10. Sara Borrell [CD10/00382]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: CD8 T cells are crucial in the immune responses against HIV infection, but HIV-infected adults suffer a naive CD8 T-cell depletion and accelerated senescence caused by chronic antigen stimulation. Although HIV-infected children preserve a better immune reconstitution capacity their CD8 responses are defective. We wanted to know, whether HIV vertical transmission produces a premature aging of the CD8 population due to antigen exposition to HIV from birth and persistent chronic activation. Methods: We conducted a multicentre cross-sectional study that compared vertically HIV-infected children with detectable (viremic) or undetectable (aviremic) viral load and age-matched healthy children. Using multiparameter flow cytometry, we studied within the CD8 population the frequencies of naive, memory, effector memory (effector memory), and TemRA subsets and measured markers of senescence, activation, and proliferation in these cells. Results: We found that naive subset in viremic children was markedly decreased and had a replicative senescence phenotype. Furthermore, viremic children showed increased frequencies of memory, T-EM and TemRA CD8 T cells, with a more activated and replicative senescence phenotype. We found that HIV-infected children with undetectable viral load have an increased senescence in memory and effector CD8 T cells, but the frequencies and phenotype of the CD8 subsets analyzed are comparable to healthy children. Conclussions: Our study shows that CD8 T cells of HIV-infected children have a more senescent phenotype when compared with age-matched healthy children. Interestingly enough, our results support the importance of maintaining undetectable viral load in HIV-infected children to avoid the premature ageing and dysfunction of CD8 T cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available