Potential role for HIV-specific CD38-/HLA-DR+ CD8+ T cells in viral suppression and cytotoxicity in HIV controllers

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Abstract

Background: HIV controllers (HIC) are rare HIV-1-infected patients who exhibit spontaneous viral control. HIC have high frequency of CD38 -/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells. Here we examined the role of this subset in HIC status. Materials and Methods: We compared CD38-/HLA-DR+ CD8+ T cells with the classical CD38+/HLA-DR+ activated phenotype in terms of 1) their activation status, reflected by CD69, CD25, CD71, CD40 and Ki67 expression, 2) functional parameters: Bcl-2 expression, proliferative capacity, and IFN-γ and IL-2 production, and 3) cytotoxic activity. We also investigated how this particular profile is generated. Results: Compared to CD38+/HLA-DR+ cells, CD38-/HLA-DR+ cells exhibited lower expression of several activation markers, better survival capacity (Bcl-2 MFI, 367 [134-462] vs 638 [307-747], P = 0.001), higher frequency of polyfunctional cells (15% [7%-33%] vs 21% [16%-43%], P = 0.0003), greater proliferative capacity (0-fold [0-2] vs 3-fold [2-11], P = 0.007), and higher cytotoxicity in vitro (7% [3%-11%] vs 13% [6%-22%], P = 0.02). The CD38-/HLA-DR+ profile was preferentially generated in response to low viral antigen concentrations. Conclusions: These data highlight the role of CD38-/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity in HIC status and provide insights into the mechanism by which they are generated. Induction of this protective CD8+ subset may be important for vaccine strategies. © 2014 Hua et al.

Figures

  • Table 1. Study population.
  • Figure 1. CD38 and HLA-DR expression on bulk and HIV-specific CD8+ T cells. (A) Proportions of bulk CD8+ T cells from HD (n = 16, light gray bars), HAART-treated patients (n = 19, mid gray bars), viremic patients (n = 21, dark gray bars) and HIC (n = 79, black bars) expressing CD38 and HLA-DR. (C) Proportions of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells from HAART-treated patients (n = 13, mid gray bars), viremic patients (n = 39, dark gray bars) and HIC (n = 80, black bars) expressing CD38 and HLA-DR. Pie charts representing CD382/HLA-DR2 (white), CD382/HLA-DR+ (black), CD38+/HLA-DR2 (light gray) and CD38+/HLA-DR+ (dark gray) cells among bulk (B) and HIV-specific CD8+ T cells (D). Statistical differences shown in the pie charts are based on the difference in the frequency of the CD382/HLA-DR+ subset between the different groups. * P,0.05, ** P,0.01, *** P,0.001. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g001
  • Figure 2. Activation phenotype of CD382/HLA-DR2, CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ subsets from HIC. (A) Proportions of HIVspecific CD8+ T cells expressing CD38, HLA-DR, CD69, CD25, CD71, CD40 and Ki67. (B–F) Proportions of CD382/HLA-DR2, CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells expressing CD69 (B), CD25 (C), CD71 (D), CD40 (E) and Ki67 (F) (n = 8). * P,0.05, ** P,0.01, *** P,0.001. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g002
  • Figure 3. Qualitative features of CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cell subsets in HIC. (A) Bcl-2 expression on CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells (n = 11). (B) Proportion of CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells producing both IFN-c and IL-2 among HIV-specific CD8+ T cells producing IFN-c or IL-2 (n = 35). (C) Fold increase in CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/ HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cell numbers after 5 days of culture with HIV peptides (2 mM) (n = 7). (D–E) Proportion of CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/ HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells producing perforin (D) and granzyme B (E) (n = 35). (F) Graphs representing percentage cytotoxicity (measured as granzyme-B-mediated intracellular cleavage of a fluorogenic substrate) of CD382/HLA-DR+ and CD38+/HLA-DR+ HIV-specific CD8+ T cells (n = 11). * P,0.05, ** P,0.01, *** P,0.001. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g003
  • Figure 4. Influence of stimulatory conditions on the activation phenotype of specific CD8+ T cells. (A) Representative dot plots of HLADR and CD38 expression in unstimulated conditions (upper graph), after IFN-a stimulation (middle graph) or peptide stimulation (2 mM, lower graph) among specific (dark dots) and non-specific (gray dots) CD8+ T cells from healthy donors after a four-day culture period. CD38 and HLA-DR expression on bulk (C left panel) and specific CD8+ T cells (B and C right panel). (B) Flow cytometry histograms showing representative results for cells from one individual in unstimulated conditions (dark lines), after IFN-a stimulation (light gray histograms) or peptide stimulation (dark gray histograms). (C) Surface expression of CD38 (white bars) and HLA-DR (gray bars) on bulk and specific CD8+ T cells (n = 4). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g004
  • Figure 5. Stimulation with a low antigen concentration induces the CD382/HLA-DR+ phenotype on specific CD8+ T cells. (A) Graphs representing the frequency of (A) CD382/HLA-DR+ cells (dark histograms) and (B) CD38+/HLA-DR+ cells (dark gray histograms) among activated EBVspecific healthy donor CD8+ T cells (i.e. those expressing CD38 and/or HLA-DR) after a four-day culture period (n = 8). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g005
  • Figure 6. High antigen sensitivity is associated with a high frequency of CD382/HLA-DR+ cells in HIC. The antigen sensitivity of HIVspecific CD8+ T cells was measured in ELISpot assays with serial limiting dilutions of antigenic peptides (from 1025 to 10211 M) and was expressed as the log molar concentration of peptide yielding 50% of the maximum response (EC50%). Correlations between the proportion of CD38 2/HLA-DR+ (A) or CD38+/HLA-DR+ (B) and the antigen sensitivity of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells from HIC. Correlations were evaluated using the Spearman rank correlation coefficient. The Spearman r correlation and the Pearson correlation curve are indicated for significant correlations (n = 47). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0101920.g006

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Hua, S., Lécuroux, C., Sáez-Cirión, A., Pancino, G., Girault, I., Versmisse, P., … Venet, A. (2014). Potential role for HIV-specific CD38-/HLA-DR+ CD8+ T cells in viral suppression and cytotoxicity in HIV controllers. PLoS ONE, 9(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101920

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