Article
CD4 T cells are rapidly depleted from tuberculosis granulomas following acute SIV co-infection
Registro en:
FOREMAN, Taylor W. et al. CD4 T cells are rapidly depleted from tuberculosis granulomas following acute SIV co-infection. Cell Reports, v. 39, p. 1-16, 2022.
2211-1247
10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110896
Autor
Foreman, Taylor W
Nelson, Christine E
Kauffman, Keith D
Lora, Nickiana E
Vinhaes, Caian L
Dorosky, Danielle E
Sakai, Shunsuke
Gomez, Felipe
Fleegle, Joel D
Parham, Melanie
Perera, Shehan R
Arlehamn, Cecilia S. Lindestam
Sette, Alessandro
Tuberculosis Imaging Program
Brenchley, Jason M
Queiroz, Artur T. L
Andrade, Bruno B
Kabat, Juraj
Via, Laura E
Barber, Daniel L
Resumen
Intramural AIDS Research Fellowship, Office of Intramural Training and Education.
Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq).
Programa de Pesquisa Intermural da Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. HIV/Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) co-infected individuals have an increased risk of tuberculosis prior to loss of peripheral CD4 T cells, raising the possibility that HIV co-infection leads to CD4 T cell depletion in lung tissue before it is evident in blood. Here, we use rhesus macaques to study the early effects of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) co-infection on pulmonary granulomas. Two weeks after SIV inoculation of Mtb-infected macaques, Mtb-specific CD4 T cells are dramatically depleted from granulomas, before CD4 T cell loss in blood, airways, and lymph nodes, or increases in bacterial loads or radiographic evidence of disease. Spatially, CD4 T cells are preferentially depleted from the granuloma core and cuff relative to B cell-rich regions. Moreover, live imaging of granuloma explants show that intralesional CD4 T cell motility is reduced after SIV co-infection. Thus, granuloma CD4 T cells may be decimated before many co-infected individuals experience the first symptoms of acute HIV infection.