Primary HIV-1 infection sets the stage for important B lymphocyte dysfunctions

K Titanji, F Chiodi, R Bellocco, D Schepis, L Osorio… - Aids, 2005 - journals.lww.com
K Titanji, F Chiodi, R Bellocco, D Schepis, L Osorio, C Tassandin, G Tambussi, S Grutzmeier…
Aids, 2005journals.lww.com
Objectives: To investigate the effects of primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) and of two antiretroviral
therapies [highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) or reverse transcriptase inhibitors
(RTI)] on activation, differentiation and survival of B cells. Methods: Naive and memory B
cells from three groups [PHI (31), chronic infection (26) and healthy donors (12)] were
studied for surface expression of Fas, LAIR-1, CD70, intracellular expression of Bcl-2 and
spontaneous apoptosis. Fluorescence activated cell sorting (IgD+ IgM+ CD19+ CD27+) and …
Abstract
Objectives:
To investigate the effects of primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) and of two antiretroviral therapies [highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) or reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTI)] on activation, differentiation and survival of B cells.
Methods:
Naive and memory B cells from three groups [PHI (31), chronic infection (26) and healthy donors (12)] were studied for surface expression of Fas, LAIR-1, CD70, intracellular expression of Bcl-2 and spontaneous apoptosis. Fluorescence activated cell sorting (IgD+ IgM+ CD19+ CD27+) and short-term cell culture to analyse induction of CD25 on B cells were performed in five patients with PHI. Patients with PHI were sampled at baseline, and after 1 and 6 months of therapy. Results were analysed by parametric and non-parametric tests and by mathematical modelling.
Results:
In PHI, B cells were significantly decreased; naive and memory B lymphocytes showed a high degree of activation, manifested by hypergammaglobulinaemia, altered expression of Fas and LAIR-1, and high rate of spontaneous apoptosis. Antiretroviral treatment improved the activation/differentiation status of B cells, reduced apoptosis to levels comparable to those in healthy individuals and restored the ability of B cells to respond to T cell-dependent activation. B cells showed slightly better recovery in patients taking HAART than in those taking RTI. Decreased IgM-positive memory B cells and lower induction of CD25 expression on B cells upon T cell activation at diagnosis of PHI was shown in five patients tested. These parameters normalized after 6 months of therapy.
Conclusion:
B cell dysfunctions found in chronic HIV-1 infection appear during PHI and initiation of antiretroviral therapy early during infection may help to preserve the B cell compartment.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins