Replicative fitness of transmitted HIV-1 drives acute immune activation, proviral load in memory CD4+ T cells, and disease progression

Author:

Claiborne Daniel T.,Prince Jessica L.,Scully Eileen,Macharia Gladys,Micci Luca,Lawson Benton,Kopycinski Jakub,Deymier Martin J.,Vanderford Thomas H.,Nganou-Makamdop Krystelle,Ende Zachary,Brooks Kelsie,Tang Jianming,Yu Tianwei,Lakhi Shabir,Kilembe William,Silvestri Guido,Douek Daniel,Goepfert Paul A.,Price Matthew A.,Allen Susan A.,Paiardini Mirko,Altfeld Marcus,Gilmour Jill,Hunter Eric

Abstract

HIV-1 infection is characterized by varying degrees of chronic immune activation and disruption of T-cell homeostasis, which impact the rate of disease progression. A deeper understanding of the factors that influence HIV-1–induced immunopathology and subsequent CD4+ T-cell decline is critical to strategies aimed at controlling or eliminating the virus. In an analysis of 127 acutely infected Zambians, we demonstrate a dramatic and early impact of viral replicative capacity (vRC) on HIV-1 immunopathogenesis that is independent of viral load (VL). Individuals infected with high-RC viruses exhibit a distinct inflammatory cytokine profile as well as significantly elevated T-cell activation, proliferation, and CD8+ T-cell exhaustion, during the earliest months of infection. Moreover, the vRC of the transmitted virus is positively correlated with the magnitude of viral burden in naive and central memory CD4+ T-cell populations, raising the possibility that transmitted viral phenotypes may influence the size of the initial latent viral reservoir. Taken together, these findings support an unprecedented role for the replicative fitness of the founder virus, independent of host protective genes and VL, in influencing multiple facets of HIV-1–related immunopathology, and that a greater focus on this parameter could provide novel approaches to clinical interventions.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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