Abstract
AbstractPediatric HIV infection remains a large global health concern despite the widespread use of antiretroviral therapy (ART). Thus, global elimination of pediatric HIV infections will require the development of novel immune-based approaches, and understanding infant immunity to HIV is critical to guide the rational design of these intervention strategies. Despite their immunological immaturity, HIV-infected children develop broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) more frequently and earlier than adults do. Furthermore, T-follicular helper (Tfh) cells have been associated with bnAb development in HIV-infected children and adults. To further our understanding of age-related differences in the development of HIV-specific immunity, we evaluated the generation of virus-specific humoral immune responses in infant (n=6) and adult (n=12) rhesus macaques (RMs) infected with a transmitted/founder (T/F) simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV.C.CH505). The plasma HIV envelope-specific IgG antibody kinetics were similar in SHIV-infected infant and adult RMs, with no significant differences in the magnitude or breadth of these responses. Interestingly, autologous tier 2 virus neutralization responses also developed with similar frequency and kinetics in infant and adult RMs, despite infants exhibiting significantly higher Tfh and germinal center B cell frequencies compared to adults. Our results indicate that the humoral immune response to SHIV infection develops with similar kinetics among infant and adult RMs, suggesting that the early life immune system is equipped to respond to HIV-1 and promote the production of neutralizing HIV antibodies.ImportanceThere is a lack of understanding on how the maturation of the infant immune system influences immunity to HIV infection, or how these responses differ from those of adults. Improving our knowledge of infant HIV immunity will help guide antiviral intervention strategies that take advantage of the unique infant immune environment to successfully elicit protective immune responses. We utilized a rhesus macaque model of SHIV infection as a tool to distinguish the differences in HIV humoral immunity in infants versus adults. Here, we demonstrate that the kinetics and quality of the infant humoral immune response to HIV are highly comparable to that of adults during the early phase of infection, despite distinct differences in their Tfh responses, indicating that slightly different mechanisms may drive infant and adult humoral immunity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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