4.6 Article

Peculiar Phenotypic and Cytotoxic Features of Pulmonary Mucosal CD8 T Cells in People Living with HIV Receiving Long-Term Antiretroviral Therapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 206, Issue 3, Pages 641-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.2000916

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [153082]
  2. CIHR Canadian HIV Cure Enterprise 2.0 [HIG-133050]
  3. Reseau SIDA et Maladies Infectieuses du Fonds de Recherche du Que'bec-Sante (FRQ-S)
  4. McGill Department of Medicine
  5. FRQ-S
  6. Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre

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People living with HIV have high rates of chronic lung diseases, including lung cancers and pulmonary infections, despite receiving antiretroviral therapy. Additionally, HIV can persist in the lung mucosa even with long-term therapy. The CD8 T cells in the lungs of HIV-positive individuals show higher levels of activation and exhaustion, with reduced killing capacity, potentially leading to a suboptimal anti-HIV immune response.
People living with HIV have high burdens of chronic lung disease, lung cancers, and pulmonary infections despite antiretroviral therapy (ART). The rates of tobacco smoking by people living with HIV vastly exceed that of the general population. Furthermore, we showed that HIV can persist within the lung mucosa despite long-term ART. As CD8 T cell cytotoxicity is pivotal for controlling viral infections and eliminating defective cells, we explored the phenotypic and functional features of pulmonary versus peripheral blood CD8 T cells in ART-treated HIV+ and uninfected controls. Bronchoal-veolar lavage fluid and matched blood were obtained from asymptomatic ART-treated HIV+ smokers (n = 11) and nonsmokers (n = 15) and uninfected smokers (n = 7) and nonsmokers (n = 10). CD8 T cell subsets and phenotypes were assessed by flow cytometry. Perforin/granzyme B content, degranulation (CD107a expression), and cytotoxicity against autologous Gag peptide-pulsed CD4 T cells (Annexin V+) following in vitro stimulation were assessed. In all groups, pulmonary CD8 T cells were enriched in effector memory subsets compared with blood and displayed higher levels of activation (HLA-DR+) and exhaustion (PD1(+)) markers. Significant reductions in proportions of senescent pulmonary CD28(-) CD57(+) CD8 T cells were observed only in HIV+ smokers. Pulmonary CD8 T cells showed lower perforin expression ex vivo compared with blood CD8 T cells, with reduced granzyme B expression only in HIV+ nonsmokers. Bronchoalveolar lavage CD8 T cells showed significantly less in vitro degranulation and CD4 killing capacity than blood CD8 T cells. Therefore, pulmonary mucosal CD8 T cells are more differentiated, activated, and exhausted, with reduced killing capacity in vitro than blood CD8 T cells, potentially contributing to a suboptimal anti-HIV immune response within the lungs.

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