PD-1 expression on HIV-specific T cells is associated with T-cell exhaustion and disease progression

被引:0
|
作者
Cheryl L. Day
Daniel E. Kaufmann
Photini Kiepiela
Julia A. Brown
Eshia S. Moodley
Sharon Reddy
Elizabeth W. Mackey
Joseph D. Miller
Alasdair J. Leslie
Chantal DePierres
Zenele Mncube
Jaikumar Duraiswamy
Baogong Zhu
Quentin Eichbaum
Marcus Altfeld
E. John Wherry
Hoosen M. Coovadia
Philip J. R. Goulder
Paul Klenerman
Rafi Ahmed
Gordon J. Freeman
Bruce D. Walker
机构
[1] Doris Duke Medical Research Institute,HIV Pathogenesis Programme
[2] University of KwaZulu Natal,Partners AIDS Research Center
[3] Massachusetts General Hospital and Division of AIDS,Nuffield Department of Medicine
[4] Harvard Medical School,Department of Medical Oncology
[5] The Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research,Emory Vaccine Center and Department of Microbiology & Immunology
[6] Oxford University,Immunology Program
[7] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,undefined
[8] Department of Medicine,undefined
[9] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[10] Emory University School of Medicine,undefined
[11] Immunology,undefined
[12] Emory University School of Medicine,undefined
[13] The Wistar Institute,undefined
[14] Howard Hughes Medical Institute,undefined
来源
Nature | 2006年 / 443卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Blocking a protein called PD-1 (programmed death 1) might provide a way to boost the immune function of T cells crippled by HIV infection. A study published earlier this year showed that blocking of PD-1 function in virally infected mice could restore the function of exhausted T cells and help fight infection. Now the phenomenon has been found to occur in humans. The T cells in HIV patients were found to have many more PD-1 receptors on their surface than is normal; the degree of PD-1 production correlates with markers of disease progression including the extent to which T cells are disabled and the levels of virus within the body. An antibody that blocks this receptor promotes the immune response to HIV in laboratory experiments, suggesting that a similar strategy might work to fight the disease in humans.
引用
收藏
页码:350 / 354
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] PD-1 EXPRESSION BY T CELLS DOES NOT BY ITSELF SERVE AS A MARKER FOR IMMUNE EXHAUSTION
    Hong, Jung Joo
    Amancha, Praveen K.
    Rogers, Kenneth
    Ansari, Aftab A.
    Villinger, Francois
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PRIMATOLOGY, 2013, 42 (05) : 276 - 276
  • [32] Expression of PD-1 by T Cells in Malignant Glioma Patients Reflects Exhaustion and Activation
    Davidson, Tom B.
    Lee, Alexander
    Hsu, Melody
    Sedighim, Shaina
    Orpilla, Joey
    Treger, Janet
    Mastall, Max
    Roesch, Saskia
    Rapp, Carmen
    Galvez, Mildred
    Mochizuki, Aaron
    Antonios, Joseph
    Garcia, Alejandro
    Kotecha, Nikesh
    Bayless, Nicholas
    Nathanson, David
    Wang, Anthony
    Everson, Richard
    Yong, William H.
    Cloughesy, Timothy F.
    Liau, Linda M.
    Herold-Mende, Christel
    Prins, Robert M.
    CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2019, 25 (06) : 1913 - 1922
  • [33] Increased HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell cytotoxic potential in HIV elite controllers is associated with T-bet expression
    Hersperger, Adam R.
    Martin, Jeffrey N.
    Shin, Lucy Y.
    Sheth, Prameet M.
    Kovacs, Colin M.
    Cosma, Gabriela L.
    Makedonas, George
    Pereyra, Florencia
    Walker, Bruce D.
    Kaul, Rupert
    Deeks, Steven G.
    Betts, Michael R.
    BLOOD, 2011, 117 (14) : 3799 - 3808
  • [34] Loss of HIV-1-specific T-cell responses associated with very rapid HIV-1 disease progression
    Streeck, Hendrik
    Schweighardt, Becky
    Jessen, Heiko
    Allgaier, Rachel L.
    Wrin, Terri
    Stawiski, Eric W.
    Lessen, Arne B.
    Allen, Todd M.
    Walker, Bruce D.
    Altfeld, Marcus
    AIDS, 2007, 21 (07) : 889 - 891
  • [35] PD-1/PD-L1 pathway and T-cell exhaustion in chronic hepatitis virus infection
    Watanabe, T.
    Bertoletti, A.
    Tanoto, T. A.
    JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS, 2010, 17 (07) : 453 - 458
  • [36] Exhaustion of CMV Specific T Cells with Enhanced PD-1 Expression In Persistent Cytomegalovirus Infection After Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation
    Kato, Tomonori
    Nishida, Tetsuya
    Murase, Miho
    Murata, Makoto
    Naoe, Tomoki
    BLOOD, 2010, 116 (21) : 1596 - 1596
  • [37] Expression of two markers of germinal center T cells (SAP and PD-1) in angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma
    Roncador, Giovanna
    Garcia Verdes-Montenegro, Jose-Francisco
    Tedoldi, Sara
    Paterson, Jennifer C.
    Klapper, Wolfram
    Ballabio, Erica
    Maestre, Lorena
    Pileri, Stefano
    Hansmann, Martin-Leo
    Piris, Miguel A.
    Mason, David Y.
    Marafioti, Teresa
    HAEMATOLOGICA, 2007, 92 (08) : 1059 - 1066
  • [38] Programmed death 1 expression on HIV-specific CD4+ T cells is driven by viral replication and associated with T cell dysfunction
    D'Souza, Michelle
    Fontenot, Andrew P.
    Mack, Doug G.
    Lozupone, Catherine
    Dillon, Stephanie
    Meditz, Amie
    Wilson, Cara C.
    Connick, Elizabeth
    Palmer, Brent E.
    JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2007, 179 (03): : 1979 - 1987
  • [39] PD-1 modulates regulatory T cells and suppresses T-cell responses in HCV-associated lymphoma
    Ni, Lei
    Ma, Cheng J.
    Zhang, Ying
    Nandakumar, Subhadra
    Zhang, Chun L.
    Wu, Xiao Y.
    Borthwick, Thomas
    Hamati, Agnes
    Chen, Xin Y.
    Kumaraguru, Uday
    Moorman, Jonathan P.
    Yao, Zhi Q.
    IMMUNOLOGY AND CELL BIOLOGY, 2011, 89 (04): : 535 - 539
  • [40] Contribution of the PD-1 and IDO pathway to T cell exhaustion in extramammary Paget disease
    Iga, N.
    Ishida, Y.
    Nakashima, C.
    Otsuka, A.
    Kabashima, K.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2018, 138 (05) : S67 - S67