T cells with high PD-1 expression are associated with lower HIV-specific immune responses despite long-term antiretroviral therapy

BJC Macatangay, RT Gandhi, RB Jones, DK Mcmahon… - Aids, 2020 - journals.lww.com
BJC Macatangay, RT Gandhi, RB Jones, DK Mcmahon, CM Lalama, RJ Bosch, JC Cyktor…
Aids, 2020journals.lww.com
Objective: We evaluated frequencies of T cells with high PD-1 expression (PD-1 HI) before
and after long-term effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), and determined if frequencies on-
ART correlated positively with measures of HIV persistence and negatively with HIV-specific
responses. Methods: We enrolled individuals who started ART during chronic infection and
had durable suppression of viremia for at least 4 years (N= 99). We assessed PD-1 HI T-cell
frequencies at timepoints pre-ART and on-ART using flow cytometry, and evaluated how …
Abstract
Objective:
We evaluated frequencies of T cells with high PD-1 expression (PD-1 HI) before and after long-term effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), and determined if frequencies on-ART correlated positively with measures of HIV persistence and negatively with HIV-specific responses.
Methods:
We enrolled individuals who started ART during chronic infection and had durable suppression of viremia for at least 4 years (N= 99). We assessed PD-1 HI T-cell frequencies at timepoints pre-ART and on-ART using flow cytometry, and evaluated how frequencies on-ART are associated with measures of HIV persistence, HIV-specific immune responses, and immune activation levels.
Results:
Pre-ART, PD-1 HI CD4+ T cells correlated positively with viremia and negatively with CD4+ T-cell count. At year 1 on-ART,% PD-1 HI CD4+ T cells decreased but then remained stable at 4 and 6–15 years on-ART, whereas% PD-1 HI CD8+ T cells on-ART remained similar to pre-ART. PD-1 HI CD4+ T cells correlated positively with HIV DNA pre-ART and on-ART, and with CD4+ T-cell activation on-ART. PD-1 HI CD4+ T cells negatively correlated with HIV Gag-specific and Env-specific T-cell responses but not with CMV-specific or EBV-specific responses. PD-1 HI CD8+ T cells trended towards a negative correlation with responses to Gag and Env, but not to CMV and EBV.
Conclusion:
PD-1 HI T cells persist in blood despite prolonged suppression on ART, correlate with HIV DNA levels, and are associated with lower HIV-specific T-cell responses but not CMV-specific or EBV-specific responses, suggesting that these cells are HIV-specific. The findings support evaluating PD-1 blockade strategies for their effect on HIV persistence and HIV-specific immunity.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins