Enhancement of HIV-1 infection and intestinal CD4+T cell depletion ex vivo by gut microbes altered during chronic HIV-1 infection

被引:53
|
作者
Dillon, Stephanie M. [1 ]
Lee, Eric J. [1 ]
Donovan, Andrew M. [1 ]
Guo, Kejun [1 ]
Harper, Michael S. [1 ]
Frank, Daniel N. [1 ,2 ]
McCarter, Martin D. [3 ]
Santiago, Mario L. [1 ]
Wilson, Cara C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Dept Med, Aurora, CO 80045 USA
[2] Univ Colorado, Microbiome Res Consortium, Aurora, CO USA
[3] Univ Colorado, Dept Surg, Aurora, CO USA
来源
RETROVIROLOGY | 2016年 / 13卷
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Human immunodeficiency virus; Microbiome; Microbial translocation; Gut; Lamina propria CD4 T cells; Gram-negative bacteria; Lipopolysaccharide; CD4(+) T-CELLS; SYSTEMIC IMMUNE ACTIVATION; INTEGRIN ALPHA(4)BETA(7); ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; PREDICT MORTALITY; CORECEPTORS CXCR4; DENDRITIC CELLS; PLASMA-LEVELS; MUCOSAL; TRANSLOCATION;
D O I
10.1186/s12977-016-0237-1
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Background: Early HIV-1 infection is characterized by high levels of HIV-1 replication and substantial CD4 T cell depletion in the intestinal mucosa, intestinal epithelial barrier breakdown, and microbial translocation. HIV-1-induced disruption of intestinal homeostasis has also been associated with changes in the intestinal microbiome that are linked to mucosal and systemic immune activation. In this study, we investigated the impact of representative bacterial species that were altered in the colonic mucosa of viremic HIV-1 infected individuals (HIV-altered mucosal bacteria; HAMB) on intestinal CD4 T cell function, infection by HIV-1, and survival in vitro. Lamina propria (LP) mononuclear cells were infected with CCR5-tropic HIV-1(BaL) or mock infected, exposed to high (3 gram-negative) or low (2 gram-positive) abundance HAMB or control gram-negative Escherichia coli and levels of productive HIV-1 infection and CD4 T cell depletion assessed. HAMB-associated changes in LP CD4 T cell activation, proliferation and HIV-1 co-receptor expression were also evaluated. Results: The majority of HAMB increased HIV-1 infection and depletion of LP CD4 T cells, but gram-negative HAMB enhanced CD4 T cell infection to a greater degree than gram-positive HAMB. Most gram-negative HAMB enhanced T cell infection to levels similar to that induced by gram-negative E. coli despite lower induction of T cell activation and proliferation by HAMB. Both gram-negative HAMB and E. coli significantly increased expression of HIV-1 co-receptor CCR5 on LP CD4 T cells. Lipopolysaccharide, a gram-negative bacteria cell wall component, up-regulated CCR5 expression on LP CD4 T cells whereas gram-positive cell wall lipoteichoic acid did not. Upregulation of CCR5 by gram-negative HAMB was largely abrogated in CD4 T cell-enriched cultures suggesting an indirect mode of stimulation. Conclusions: Gram-negative commensal bacteria that are altered in abundance in the colonic mucosa of HIV-1 infected individuals have the capacity to enhance CCR5-tropic HIV-1 productive infection and depletion of LP CD4 T cells in vitro. Enhanced infection appears to be primarily mediated indirectly through increased expression of CCR5 on LP CD4 T cells without concomitant large scale T cell activation. This represents a novel mechanism potentially linking intestinal dysbiosis to HIV-1 mucosal pathogenesis.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] T cell dynamics in HIV-1 infection
    Douek, DC
    Picker, LJ
    Koup, RA
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 21 : 265 - 304
  • [22] HIV-1/HSV-2 Co-Infected Adults in Early HIV-1 Infection Have Elevated CD4+T Cell Counts
    Barbour, Jason D.
    Sauer, Mariana M.
    Sharp, Elizabeth R.
    Garrison, Keith E.
    Long, Brian R.
    Tomiyama, Helena
    Bassichetto, Katia C.
    Oliveira, Solange M.
    Abbate, Maria C.
    Nixon, Douglas F.
    Kallas, Esper G.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2007, 2 (10):
  • [23] Efficient inhibition by Raltegravir of HIV-1 Infection in Human Primary Macrophages and in CD4+T Lymphocytes and of the cellular Apoptosis HIV-1 correlated
    Pollicita, M.
    Scopelliti, F.
    Casabianca, A.
    Orlandi, C.
    Salpini, R.
    Di Santo, F.
    Bertoli, A.
    Magnani, M.
    Aquaro, S.
    Silberstein, F. Ceccherini
    Perno, C. F.
    [J]. INFECTION, 2010, 38 : 11 - 11
  • [24] Productive HIV-1 Infection of Cervical Tissue Ex Vivo
    Saba, Elisa
    Ferrari, Davide
    Origoni, Massimo
    Taccagni, Gianluca
    Doglioni, Claudio
    Lisco, Andrea
    Margolis, Leonid
    Poli, Guido
    [J]. JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2012, 59 : 75 - 75
  • [25] Intestinal microbiota and HIV-1 infection
    Trindade, E. B. S. M.
    Souza, L. R.
    Lopes, C. A. M.
    Pereira, P. C. M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VENOMOUS ANIMALS AND TOXINS INCLUDING TROPICAL DISEASES, 2007, 13 (02) : 431 - 445
  • [26] Efficient macrophage infection by phagocytosis of dying HIV-1 -infected CD4+T cells
    Fedde Groot
    Rebecca A Russell
    Amy E Baxter
    Sonja Welsch
    Christopher JA Duncan
    Christopher Willberg
    Christina Ochsenbauer
    John C Kappes
    Michael Shaw
    Quentin J Sattentau
    [J]. Retrovirology, 8 (Suppl 2)
  • [27] Central memory CD4+T cells are preferential targets of double infection by HIV-1
    Haqqani, Aiman A.
    Marek, Samantha L.
    Kumar, Jagadish
    Davenport, Miles
    Wang, Heng
    Tilton, John C.
    [J]. Virology Journal, 2015, 12
  • [28] Vpr driving DNA methylation variation of CD4+T cells in HIV-1 infection
    Wang, Peipei
    Meng, Zhuoyue
    Deng, Kai
    Gao, Zhiliang
    Cai, Jinfeng
    [J]. VIROLOGY JOURNAL, 2024, 21 (01)
  • [29] Ex vivo modulation of mesenchymal stem cell function in HIV-1 infection
    Cotter, E. J.
    Chew, N.
    Powderly, W. G.
    Doran, P. P.
    [J]. ANTIVIRAL THERAPY, 2008, 13 (08) : A25 - A26
  • [30] T cell depletion in HIV-1 infection: how CD4+ T cells go out of stock
    Mette D. Hazenberg
    Dörte Hamann
    Hanneke Schuitemaker
    Frank Miedema
    [J]. Nature Immunology, 2000, 1 : 285 - 289