Collagen deposition in HIV-1 infected lymphatic tissues and T cell homeostasis
TW Schacker, PL Nguyen, GJ Beilman… - The Journal of clinical …, 2002 - jci.org
TW Schacker, PL Nguyen, GJ Beilman, S Wolinsky, M Larson, C Reilly, AT Haase
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2002•jci.orgLymphatic tissues (LTs) are structurally organized to promote interaction between antigens,
chemokines, growth factors, and lymphocytes to generate an immunologic response and
maintain normal-sized populations of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Inflammation and tissue
remodeling that accompany local innate and adaptive immune responses to HIV-1
replication cause damage to the LT architecture. As a result, normal populations of CD4+
and CD8+ T cells cannot be supported and antigen-lymphocyte interactions are impaired …
chemokines, growth factors, and lymphocytes to generate an immunologic response and
maintain normal-sized populations of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Inflammation and tissue
remodeling that accompany local innate and adaptive immune responses to HIV-1
replication cause damage to the LT architecture. As a result, normal populations of CD4+
and CD8+ T cells cannot be supported and antigen-lymphocyte interactions are impaired …
Lymphatic tissues (LTs) are structurally organized to promote interaction between antigens, chemokines, growth factors, and lymphocytes to generate an immunologic response and maintain normal-sized populations of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Inflammation and tissue remodeling that accompany local innate and adaptive immune responses to HIV-1 replication cause damage to the LT architecture. As a result, normal populations of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells cannot be supported and antigen-lymphocyte interactions are impaired. This conclusion is supported herein following LT sampling before and during anti-HIV therapy in persons with acute, chronic, and late-stage HIV-1 infection. Among seven individuals treated with anti-retroviral therapy (ART) and four individuals deferring therapy we found evidence of significant paracortical T cell zone damage associated with deposition of collagen, the extent of which was inversely correlated with both the size of the LT CD4+ T cell population and the change in peripheral CD4+ T cell count with anti-HIV therapy. The HIV-1–associated inflammatory changes and scarring in LT both limit the ability of the tissue to support and reestablish normal-sized populations of CD4+ T cells and suggest a novel mechanism of T cell depletion that may explain the failure of ART to significantly increase CD4+ T cell populations in some HIV-1–infected persons.
