Title
TL1A-DR3 plasma levels are predictive of HIV-1 disease control, and DR3 costimulation boosts HIV-1-specific T cell responses
Date Issued
15 December 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
research article
Author(s)
Oriol-Tordera B.
Olvera A.
Duran-Castells C.
Llano A.
Mothe B.
Massanella M.
Dalmau J.
Sanchez J.
Calle M.L.
Clotet B.
Martinez-Picado J.
Negredo E.
Blanco J.
Hartigan-O'Connor D.
Brander C.
Ruiz-Riol M.
Publisher(s)
American Association of Immunologists
Abstract
Relative control of HIV-1 infection has been linked to genetic and immune host factors. In this study, we analyzed 96 plasma proteome arrays from chronic untreated HIV-1-infected individuals using the classificatory random forest approach to discriminate between uncontrolled disease (plasma viral load [pVL] >50,000 RNA copies/ml; CD4 counts 283 cells/mm3, n = 47) and relatively controlled disease (pVL <10,000 RNA copies/ml; CD4 counts 657 cells/mm3, n = 49). Our analysis highlighted the TNF molecule's relevance, in particular, TL1A (TNFSF15) and its cognate DR3 (TNFSRF25), both of which increased in the relative virus control phenotype. DR3 levels (in plasma and PBMCs) were validated in unrelated cohorts (including long-term nonprogressors), thus confirming their independence from CD4 counts and pVL. Further analysis in combined antiretroviral treatment (cART)-treated individuals with a wide range of CD4 counts (137-1835 cells/mm3) indicated that neither TL1A nor DR3 levels reflected recovery of CD4 counts with cART. Interestingly, in cART-treated individuals, plasma TL1A levels correlated with regulatory T cell frequencies, whereas soluble DR3 was strongly associated with the abundance of effector HLA-DR+CD8+ T cells. A positive correlation was also observed between plasma DR3 levels and the HIV-1-specific T cell responses. In vitro, costimulation of PBMC with DR3-specific mAb increased the magnitude of HIV-1-specific responses. Finally, in splenocytes of DNA.HTI-vaccinated mice, costimulation of HTI peptides and a DR3 agonist (4C12) intensified the magnitude of T cell responses by 27%. These data describe the role of the TL1A-DR3 axis in the natural control of HIV-1 infection and point to the use of DR3 agonists in HIV-1 vaccine regimens.
Start page
3348
End page
3357
Volume
205
Issue
12
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Inmunología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85097494585
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Immunology
ISSN of the container
0022-1767
Sponsor(s)
Research and Innovation under Grant 681137-EAVI2020, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Program Grant P01-AI131568, the Fondation Dormeur, Vaduz, (Liechtenstein), and a research agreement with Aelix Therapeutics. M.L.C. was partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, Reference MTM2015-64465-C2-1-R. This work has been carried out within the framework of the Ph.D. in Advanced Immunology of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona for B.O.-T. and C.D.-C. This study has also received funding from “La Caixa” Foundation under Project HR17-00199. This work was supported by a grant from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (SAF2017_89726_R), the European Union Horizon 2020 Framework Programme for
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus