Morphological and molecular comparison of HIV-associated and sporadic inclusion body myositis

Author:

Vogt Sinja,Kleefeld Felix,Preusse Corinna,Arendt Gabriele,Bieneck Stefan,Brunn Anna,Deckert Martina,Englert Benjamin,Goebel Hans-Hilmar,Masuhr Anja,Neuen-Jacob Eva,Kornblum Cornelia,Reimann Jens,Montagnese Federica,Schoser Benedikt,Stenzel Werner,Hahn Katrin

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe molecular characteristics of sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM) have been intensively studied, and specific patterns on the cellular, protein and RNA level have emerged. However, these characteristics have not been studied in the context of HIV-associated IBM (HIV-IBM). In this study, we compared clinical, histopathological, and transcriptomic patterns of sIBM and HIV-IBM.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study, we compared patients with HIV-IBM and sIBM based on clinical and morphological features as well as gene expression levels of specific T-cell markers in skeletal muscle biopsy samples. Non-disease individuals served as controls (NDC). Cell counts for immunohistochemistry and gene expression profiles for quantitative PCR were used as primary outcomes.Results14 muscle biopsy samples (7 HIV-IBM, 7 sIBM) of patients and 6 biopsy samples from NDC were included. Clinically, HIV-IBM patients showed a significantly lower age of onset and a shorter period between symptom onset and muscle biopsy. Histomorphologically, HIV-IBM patients showed no KLRG1+or CD57+cells, while the number of PD1+cells did not differ significantly between the two groups. All markers were shown to be significantly upregulated at gene expression level with no significant difference between the IBM subgroups.ConclusionDespite HIV-IBM and sIBM sharing important clinical, histopathological, and transcriptomic signatures, the presence of KLRG1+cells discriminated sIBM from HIV-IBM. This may be explained by longer disease duration and subsequent T-cell stimulation in sIBM. Thus, the presence of TEMRA cells is characteristic for sIBM, but not a prerequisite for the development of IBM in HIV+patients.

Funder

Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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