4.8 Article

Inversed Ratio of CD39/CD73 Expression on γδ T Cells in HIV Versus Healthy Controls Correlates With Immune Activation and Disease Progression

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.867167

Keywords

gamma delta T cells; HIV-1; T cell; CD39; CD73; V delta 2; IL-10; elite controllers

Categories

Funding

  1. DFG [SFB1328 A12]
  2. H.W. & J. Hector Stiftung [M2101]
  3. DZIF [TTU 04.816]
  4. European Union (European HIV Vaccine Alliance) [681032]

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This study found that the expression of CD39 and CD73 on γδT cells is associated with HIV disease progression and immune activation. CD39+ and CD73+ γδT cells may have an immunomodulatory role in the pathogenesis of chronic HIV infection.
Background: gamma delta T cells are unconventional T cells that have been demonstrated to be crucial for the pathogenesis and potentially for the cure of HIV-1 infection. The ectonucleotidase CD39 is part of the purinergic pathway that regulates immune responses by degradation of pro-inflammatory ATP in concert with CD73. Few studies on the expression of the ectoenzymes CD73 and CD39 on human gamma delta T cells in HIV have been performed to date. Methods: PBMC of n=86 HIV-1-infected patients were compared to PBMC of n=26 healthy individuals using 16-color flow cytometry determining the surface expression of CD39 and CD73 on V delta 1 and V delta 2 T cells in association with differentiation (CD45RA, CD28, CD27), activation and exhaustion (TIGIT, PD-1, CD38, and HLA-DR), and assessing the intracellular production of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-2, TGF-ss, TNF-alpha, Granzyme B, IL-10, IFN-gamma) after in vitro stimulation with PMA/ionomycin. Results: CD39 and CD73 expression on gamma delta T cells were inversed in HIV infection which correlated with HIV disease progression and immune activation. CD39, but not CD73 expression on gamma delta T cells of ART-treated patients returned to levels comparable with those of healthy individuals. Only a small subset (< 1%) of gamma delta T cells co-expressed CD39 and CD73 in healthy or HIV-infected individuals. There were significantly more exhausted and terminally differentiated CD39+ V delta 1 T cells regardless of the disease status. Functionally, IL-10 was only detectable in CD39+ gamma delta T cells after in vitro stimulation in all groups studied. Viremic HIV-infected patients showed the highest levels of IL-10 production. The highest percentage of IL-10+ cells was found in the small CD39/CD73 co-expressing gamma delta T-cell population, both in healthy and HIV-infected individuals. Also, CD39+ V delta 2 T cells produced IL-10 more frequently than their CD39+ V delta 1 counterparts in all individuals regardless of the HIV status. Conclusions: Our results point towards a potential immunomodulatory role of CD39+ and CD73+ gamma delta T cells in the pathogenesis of chronic HIV infection that needs further investigation.

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