Diversity of the T-cell receptor BV repertoire in HIV-1-infected patients reflects the biphasic CD4+ T-cell repopulation kinetics during highly active antiretroviral therapy. | Read by QxMD (original) (raw)
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
S Kostense, F M Raaphorst, D W Notermans, J Joling, B Hooibrink, N G Pakker, S A Danner, J M Teale, F Miedema
OBJECTIVES: Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) induces a decline in viral load and a biphasic increase in peripheral blood CD4+ T-cell counts in HIV-infected patients. To evaluate the effect of HAART on T-cell receptor (TCR) diversity of repopulating naive and memory CD4+ T cells, complementarity determining region 3 (CDR3) spectratyping was performed.
DESIGN: For four patients treated with HAART, CD45RO+ (memory) and CD45RA+ (naive) CD4+ T cells were isolated from peripheral blood leukocyte samples obtained 1 week before, 1-2 months after, and 9-11 months after start of treatment.
METHODS: CDR3 regions were amplified by TCR-BV-specific nested PCR from CD4+ T-cell subsets. CDR3 size distributions and single-strand conformation polymorphism profiles were compared as an indication for TCR diversity.
RESULTS: Increasing blood CD4+ T-cell counts during the first 2 months of treatment coincided with increased perturbation of CDR3 patterns in CD4+ T-cell subsets, suggesting an early oligoclonal repopulation. At later timepoints, CDR3 size diversity increased when T-cell counts did not substantially decrease. Memory and naive CD4+ T cells generally showed comparable levels of perturbation.
CONCLUSION: Diversity of the TCR repertoire reflected biphasic T-cell repopulation during HAART, compatible with initial redistribution and later CD4+ T-cell production. Sustained elevation of T-cell counts will in principle result in restoration of TCR diversity.