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Follicular CD8 T cells accumulate in HIV infection and can kill infected cells in vitro via bispecific antibodies

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2017-01-18

Authors

Petrovas, Constantinos
Ferrando-Martinez, Sara
Gerner, Michael Y.
Casazza, Joseph P.
Pegu, Amarendra
Deleage, Claire
Cooper, Arik
Hataye, Jason
Andrews, Sarah
Ambrozak, David

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Amer assoc advancement science
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Cytolytic CD8 T cells play a crucial role in the control and elimination of virus-infected cells and are a major focus of HIV cure efforts. However, it has been shown that HIV-specific CD8 T cells are infrequently found within germinal centers (GCs), a predominant site of active and latent HIV infection. We demonstrate that HIV infection induces marked changes in the phenotype, frequency, and localization of CD8 T cells within the lymph node (LN). Significantly increased frequencies of CD8 T cells in the B cell follicles and GCs were found in LNs from treated and untreated HIV-infected individuals. This profile was associated with persistent local immune activation but did not appear to be directly related to local viral replication. Follicular CD8 (fCD8) T cells, despite compromised cytokine polyfunctionality, showed good cytolytic potential characterized by high ex vivo expression of granzyme B and perforin. We used an anti-HIV/anti-CD3 bispecific antibody in a redirected killing assay and found that fCD8 T cells had better killing activity than did non-fCD8 T cells. Our results indicate that CD8 T cells with potent cytolytic activity are recruited to GCs during HIV infection and, if appropriately redirected to kill HIV-infected cells, could be an effective component of an HIV cure strategy.

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Human-immunodeficiency-virus, Lymph-nodes, Replication, Effector, Lymphocytes, Activation, Responses, Tissue, Rna, Expansion

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