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BCL-2 antagonism sensitizes cytotoxic T cell–resistant HIV reservoirs to elimination ex vivo
Yanqin Ren, … , Catherine M. Bollard, R. Brad Jones
Yanqin Ren, … , Catherine M. Bollard, R. Brad Jones
Published February 6, 2020
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2020;130(5):2542-2559. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI132374.
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Research Article AIDS/HIV Immunology

BCL-2 antagonism sensitizes cytotoxic T cell–resistant HIV reservoirs to elimination ex vivo

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Abstract

Curing HIV infection will require the elimination of a reservoir of infected CD4+ T cells that persists despite HIV-specific cytotoxic T cell (CTL) responses. Although viral latency is a critical factor in this persistence, recent evidence also suggests a role for intrinsic resistance of reservoir-harboring cells to CTL killing. This resistance may have contributed to negative outcomes of clinical trials, where pharmacologic latency reversal has thus far failed to drive reductions in HIV reservoirs. Through transcriptional profiling, we herein identified overexpression of the prosurvival factor B cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) as a distinguishing feature of CD4+ T cells that survived CTL killing. We show that the inducible HIV reservoir was disproportionately present in BCL-2hi subsets in ex vivo CD4+ T cells. Treatment with the BCL-2 antagonist ABT-199 was not sufficient to drive reductions in ex vivo viral reservoirs when tested either alone or with a latency-reversing agent (LRA). However, the triple combination of strong LRAs, HIV-specific T cells, and a BCL-2 antagonist uniquely enabled the depletion of ex vivo viral reservoirs. Our results provide rationale for novel therapeutic approaches targeting HIV cure and, more generally, suggest consideration of BCL-2 antagonism as a means of enhancing CTL immunotherapy in other settings, such as cancer.

Authors

Yanqin Ren, Szu Han Huang, Shabnum Patel, Winiffer D. Conce Alberto, Dean Magat, Dughan Ahimovic, Amanda B. Macedo, Ryan Durga, Dora Chan, Elizabeth Zale, Talia M. Mota, Ronald Truong, Thomas Rohwetter, Chase D. McCann, Colin M. Kovacs, Erika Benko, Avery Wimpelberg, Christopher Cannon, W. David Hardy, Alberto Bosque, Catherine M. Bollard, R. Brad Jones

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Figure 4

Intact HIV proviruses are preferentially harbored in BCL-2hi–expressing CD4+ T cells ex vivo.

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Intact HIV proviruses are preferentially harbored in BCL-2hi–expressing ...
(A) Shown are ddPCR results quantifying HIV DNA in resting ex vivo CD4+ T cells from ARV-treated donors that had been flow cytometry sorted based on BCL-2 expression. Intact quantification based on droplets that were double-positive for gag and env signals (represent full-length proviruses); gag, quantification based on any droplet amplified with gag primer/probes; env, quantification based on any droplet that amplified with env primer/probes (Wilcoxon’s matched-pairs signed-rank test, n = 7). (B) Flow cytometry plots depicting sorting based on both memory phenotype and BCL-2 expression, using CD45RA and CCR7 to separate TCM and TEM populations. (C) Intact and gag (see A) ddPCR results on samples from 2 ARV-treated donors, WWH-B008 (corresponds to flow plots in B), and WWH-B011. Note that the difference in presentation and analysis of these ddPCR data versus other ddPCR data in the manuscript is due to the low DNA yield after BCL-2 intracellular staining and flow sorting. Whereas in other experiments, each of 8 ddPCR replicates were treated as individual data points, here the ddPCR software (Quantasoft) generated maximum likelihood estimates of 95% CI (shown) based on the frequency of positive droplets for all 4 to 6 replicates taken together. This analysis method is recommended by the instrument manufacturer for the analysis of rare events.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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