Detecting Sources of Immune Activation and Viral Rebound in HIV Infection

被引:10
|
作者
Wietgrefe, Stephen W. [1 ]
Duan, Lijie [1 ]
Anderson, Jodi [2 ]
Marques, Guillermo [3 ]
Sanders, Mark [3 ]
Cummins, Nathan W. [4 ]
Badley, Andrew D. [4 ]
Dobrowolski, Curtis [5 ]
Karn, Jonathan [5 ]
Pagliuzza, Amelie [6 ]
Chomont, Nicolas [6 ,7 ]
Sannier, Geremy [6 ,7 ]
Dube, Mathieu [6 ]
Kaufmann, Daniel E. [6 ,8 ]
Zuck, Paul [9 ]
Wu, Guoxin [9 ]
Howell, Bonnie J. [9 ]
Reilly, Cavan [10 ]
Herschhorn, Alon [2 ]
Schacker, Timothy W. [2 ]
Haase, Ashley T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Microbiol & Immunol, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[2] Univ Minnesota, Dept Med, Box 736 UMHC, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[3] Univ Minnesota, Univ Imaging Ctr, Minneapolis, MN USA
[4] Mayo Clin & Res Fdn, Rochester, MN USA
[5] Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Mol Biol & Microbiol, Cleveland, OH USA
[6] Ctr Rech Ctr Hosp lUniv Montreal CRCHUM, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[7] Univ Montreal, Dept Microbiol Infectiol & Immunol, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[8] Univ Montreal, Dept Med, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[9] Merck & Co Inc, Kenilworth, NJ USA
[10] Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Biostat, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
HIV; immune activation; viral rebound; HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS; AUTOMATED DIGITAL IMMUNOASSAY; T-CELLS; INFLAMMATION; SENSITIVITY; PROVIRUSES; EXPRESSION; RESERVOIR; DISEASE; LATENT;
D O I
10.1128/jvi.00885-22
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Anti-retroviral therapy (ART) has greatly improved the quality and length of life for people living with HIV, but immune activation does not normalize during ART, and persistent immune activation has been linked to increased morbidity and mortality. We report a comparison of assays of two potential sources of immune activation during ART: rare cells producing HIV and the virus' major viral protein, p24, benchmarked on a cell model of active and latent infections and a method to visualize HIV-producing cells. Anti-retroviral therapy (ART) generally suppresses HIV replication to undetectable levels in peripheral blood, but immune activation associated with increased morbidity and mortality is sustained during ART, and infection rebounds when treatment is interrupted. To identify drivers of immune activation and potential sources of viral rebound, we modified RNAscope in situ hybridization to visualize HIV-producing cells as a standard against which to compare the following assays of potential sources of immune activation and virus rebound following treatment interruption: (i) envelope detection by induced transcription-based sequencing (EDITS) assay; (ii) HIV-Flow; (iii) Flow-FISH assays that can scan tissues and cell suspensions to detect rare cells expressing env mRNA, gag mRNA/Gag protein and p24; and (iv) an ultrasensitive immunoassay that detects p24 in cell/tissue lysates at subfemtomolar levels. We show that the sensitivities of these assays are sufficient to detect one rare HIV-producing/env mRNA(+)/p24(+) cell in one million uninfected cells. These high-throughput technologies provide contemporary tools to detect and characterize rare cells producing virus and viral antigens as potential sources of immune activation and viral rebound. IMPORTANCE Anti-retroviral therapy (ART) has greatly improved the quality and length of life for people living with HIV, but immune activation does not normalize during ART, and persistent immune activation has been linked to increased morbidity and mortality. We report a comparison of assays of two potential sources of immune activation during ART: rare cells producing HIV and the virus' major viral protein, p24, benchmarked on a cell model of active and latent infections and a method to visualize HIV-producing cells. We show that assays of HIV envelope mRNA (EDITS assay), gag mRNA, and p24 (Flow-FISH, HIV-Flow. and ultrasensitive p24 immunoassay) detect HIV-producing cells and p24 at sensitivities of one infected cell in a million uninfected cells, thereby providing validated tools to explore sources of immune activation during ART in the lymphoid and other tissue reservoirs.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Mechanisms underlying abnormalities of immune activation/coagulation in HIV infection
    Lane, Clifford
    JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY, 2014, 17 : 1 - 1
  • [42] Inflammation, Immune Activation, and CVD Risk in Individuals With HIV Infection
    Stein, James H.
    Hsue, Priscilla Y.
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2012, 308 (04): : 405 - 406
  • [43] Innate Immune Activation in Primary HIV-1 Infection
    Chang, J. Judy
    Altfeld, Marcus
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2010, 202 : S297 - S301
  • [44] NK Cells and immune activation in HIV-1 infection
    Goodier, Martin R.
    RETROVIROLOGY, 2010, 7 : 5 - 5
  • [45] HIV infection drives immune activation of angiogenic T cells
    Li, Tong
    Zhu, Ziang
    Chen, Jinya
    Kumar, Jai
    Kumar, Princy
    Catalfamo, Marta
    JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2021, 206
  • [46] The fecal microbiome directly drives immune activation in HIV infection
    Tincati, Camilla
    Ancona, Giuseppe
    Marchetti, Giulia
    ANNALS OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2018, 6
  • [47] Quantitative profiling of innate immune activation by viral infection in single cells
    Timm, Andrea C.
    Warrick, Jay W.
    Yin, John
    INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY, 2017, 9 (09) : 782 - 791
  • [48] Intestinal Epithelial Apoptosis and Immune Activation During HIV Infection
    Somsouk, Ma
    Dunham, Richard M.
    Albright, Rebecca
    Inadomi, John M.
    Estes, Jake
    McCune, Joseph M.
    Peter, Hunt W.
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2013, 144 (05) : S835 - S836
  • [50] ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN IMMUNE ACTIVATION AND ANEMIA IN HIV-INFECTION
    FUCHS, D
    ZANGERLE, R
    ARTNERDWORZAK, E
    WEISS, G
    DIERICH, MP
    WACHTER, H
    FASEB JOURNAL, 1992, 6 (04): : A1326 - A1326