Immune activation correlates with and predicts CXCR4 co-receptor tropism switch in HIV-1 infection

Author:

Connell Bridgette J.,Hermans Lucas E.,Wensing Annemarie M. J.,Schellens Ingrid,Schipper Pauline J.,van Ham Petra M.,de Jong Dorien T. C. M.,Otto Sigrid,Mathe Tholakele,Moraba Robert,Borghans José A. M.,Papathanasopoulos Maria A.,Kruize Zita,Venter Francois W. D.,Kootstra Neeltje A.,Tempelman Hugo,Tesselaar Kiki,Nijhuis Monique

Abstract

AbstractHIV-1 cell entry is mediated by binding to the CD4-receptor and chemokine co-receptors CCR5 (R5) or CXCR4 (X4). R5-tropic viruses are predominantly detected during early infection. A switch to X4-tropism often occurs during the course of infection. X4-tropism switching is strongly associated with accelerated disease progression and jeopardizes CCR5-based HIV-1 cure strategies. It is unclear whether host immunological factors play a causative role in tropism switching. We investigated the relationship between immunological factors and X4-tropism in a cross-sectional study in HIV-1 subtype C (HIV-1C)-infected patients and in a longitudinal HIV-1 subtype B (HIV-1B) seroconverter cohort. Principal component analysis identified a cluster of immunological markers (%HLA-DR+ CD4+ T-cells, %CD38+HLA-DR+ CD4+ T-cells, %CD38+HLA-DR+ CD8+ T-cells, %CD70+ CD4+ T-cells, %CD169+ monocytes, and absolute CD4+ T-cell count) in HIV-1C patients that was independently associated with X4-tropism (aOR 1.044, 95% CI 1.003–1.087, p = 0.0392). Analysis of individual cluster contributors revealed strong correlations of two markers of T-cell activation (%HLA-DR+ CD4+ T-cells, %HLA-DR+CD38+ CD4+ T-cells) with X4-tropism, both in HIV-1C patients (p = 0.01;p = 0.03) and HIV-1B patients (p = 0.0003;p = 0.0001). Follow-up data from HIV-1B patients subsequently revealed that T-cell activation precedes and independently predicts X4-tropism switching (aHR 1.186, 95% CI 1.065–1.321, p = 0.002), providing novel insights into HIV-1 pathogenesis and CCR5-based curative strategies.

Funder

Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship

Poliomyelitis Research Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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