1 / 26

Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center

Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases National Institutes of Health. Lymph node structure and HIV-1 infection: T cell immunopathogenesis. Richard A. Koup Vaccine Research Center. Background.

nara
Download Presentation

Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases National Institutes of Health Lymph node structure and HIV-1 infection: T cell immunopathogenesis Richard A. Koup Vaccine Research Center

  2. Background • HIV replication is active in lymph nodes throughout the course of HIV infection • HIV leads to an initial hypertrophy, followed by involution of lymphoid tissues (Tim Schacker) • SIV infection in rhesus macaques has a similar pathogenesis to HIV infection in humans (Guido Silvestri) and can be used to study the immuno-pathogenesis of HIV infection in lymph nodes • In this talk I will concentrate on using acute and early SIV infection of rhesus macaques to model HIV pathogenesis in lymph nodes

  3. The Lymph Node has a Complicated Structure Janeway’sImmunobiology (8th Edition)

  4. Simplified LN Structure Lymphoid Follicle (B cells) Light Zone (T/B cell interaction) Germinal Center (B and T cells) Dark Zone (B cell proliferation) Paracortical Area (T cells)

  5. Simplified LN Structure – HIV Infection Uninfected Infected - Early Infected - Late Germinal Center Hypertrophy (increased germinal center T cells) Loss of non-germinal center T cells

  6. Outline • Virus replication in LN during acute/early HIV/SIV infection • Changes in CD4 T cell populations in LNs during acute/early HIV/SIV replication • Underlying mechanisms • Non-T cell consequences

  7. SIV as a model for HIV infection Nature 434:1093-7, 2005

  8. Acute Infection: Plasma Viral Loads Plasma Viral Load (Log10)

  9. Total CD4 Cell Dynamics CD4 T Cells, % of CD3+

  10. J e j u n u m 4 0 I n g u i n a l 6 0 L N 4 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 Memory CD4 T Cell Dynamics M e s e n t e r i c 4 0 4 0 P B M C L N Early expansion at d. 3 2 0 2 0 CD4 Memory, % of CD3+ 0 0 Loss of ~80% of cells by d. 17 0 3 7 1 0 1 4 1 7 0 3 7 1 0 1 4 1 7 D a y s P o s t - i n f e c t i o n

  11. N a i v e C D 4 T C e l l s M e m o r y C D 4 T C e l l s 5 P B M C 2 x 1 0 5 1 x 1 0 0 5 2 x 1 0 I n g u i n a l L N 5 1 x 1 0 Cell-Associated Viral Load (gag Copies / 105 cells) 0 5 2 x 1 0 M e s e n t e r i c L N 5 1 x 1 0 0 5 2 x 1 0 J e j u n u m 5 1 x 1 0 0 3 7 1 0 1 4 1 7 3 7 1 0 1 4 1 7 D a y s P o s t - i n f e c t i o n Cell-Associated Viral Loads

  12. These data do not take into account structural localization within the LN • Where is the virus replicating with respect to the paracortical T cell zone and the light zone of the germinal center? • What is happening to CD4 T cell frequency in these areas during acute and early SIV infection? Light zone of the germinal center Paracortical T cell zone

  13. 5 10 4 10 70.8 3 10 19.5 2 10 0 3 4 5 0 10 10 10 Surface markers can distinguish CD4 T cells from these different areas Light zone of the germinal center FSC-H CD4 CD8 FSC-A CCR7 CD28 Aqua Paracortical T cell zone PD-1 CD3 CD95

  14. 5 10 4 10 3 10 2 10 0 3 4 5 0 10 10 10 5 Where does SIV replicate? 4 3 2 1 Acute SIV (3-21 days) Early SIV (>2 months) 0 p=0.0078 p=0.0156 Light zone of the germinal center SIV Gag DNA (copies/cell) SIV Gag DNA (copies/cell) Paracortical T cell zone Would expect to see depletion of CD4 T cells in germinal centers CCR7 ICOS PD-1 CD150 1.5 1.0 0.5 0

  15. 5 10 4 10 3 10 2 10 0 2 3 4 5 0 10 10 10 10 SIV: Relative accumulation of CD4 T cells in GCs SIV acute SIV early SIV- CCR7 47.8 29.1 12.9 PD-1 % of CM CD4 T cells TFH CCR7high PD-1low CCR7high/low PD-1dim

  16. Accumulation of GC CD4 T cellsduring SIV infection: Abundant GCs with retained architecture Light zone: T - B cell interaction Dark zone: B cell proliferation CD4PD1Ki-67 Michael Gerner, Ron Germain

  17. Mechanism? Uninfected Infected - Early ?

  18. No correlation between VLs and percent GC T cells during SIV infection Viral Loads Percent GC T cells in LN

  19. Accumulation of GC Tcells is associated with general immune activation (sCD14) SIV- SIV acute SIV early (low % of TFH) SIV early (high % of TFH) p=0.0004 p=0.0164 p=0.0013 sCD14 (x106 pg/ml) % of CM CD4 T cells GC T cells

  20. SIV: Relative accumulation of GC Tcells IL-6 signaling drives the up-regulation of Bcl-6and enhanced T cell responses that are seen during chronic LCMV infection in mice. Does IL-6 production drive the accumulation of GC Tcells during early SIV infection in monkeys?

  21. Increase in the IL-6/IL-6R axis is associated with GC Tcell accumulation during SIV infection p=0.0215 p=0.0136 Plasma IL-6 (pg/ml) IL6Ra on GC T cells (MFI) Percent GC T cells in LN SIV- SIV+ (early)

  22. Mechanism? Uninfected Infected - Early Immune activation 1) IL-6 2) 3) Altered phospho STAT (3>1) 4) GC T cell differentiation Petrovas et al, J. Clin. Invest., 2012

  23. 5 5 10 5 5 10 10 10 4 4 4 10 4 10 10 10 3 3 3 10 3 10 10 10 2 2 10 10 0 0 0 0 3 4 5 3 4 5 0 10 10 10 2 3 4 5 3 4 5 0 10 10 10 0 10 10 10 10 0 10 10 10 GC T cells are TFH that influence B cells differentiation and antibody production LN PBMC Aqua CD3 22.3 6.49 1.87 0.72 28.7 86.1 LN 9.84 61.3 81.5 15.8 SSC CD20 PNA SIV- SIV+ low T SIV+ high T IgG 10 PNAhighIgGlow SIV - SIV chronic (low % GC T cells) 7.5 PNAhighIgGhigh SIV chronic (high % GC T cells) p=0.051 5 SIV-specific IgG (titer, x104) p=0.015 2.5 0 gp120 SIV chronic (low % GC T cells) SIV chronic (high % GC T cells)

  24. Conclusions • HIV/SIV replication is profound during acute infection • This leads to a massive depletion of memory CD4 T cells in the LN and gut • CD4 T cell depletion from the gut leads to microbial translocation and general immune activation (discussed elsewhere) • Immune activation promotes differentiation of T cells in the LN which move to and accumulate in the GCs (lymphoid hypertrophy) • Non-pathogenic SIV controls immune activation • Continued immune activation ultimately leads to fibrosis of the lymph nodes

  25. Simplified LN Structure – HIV Infection Uninfected Infected - Early Infected - Late Germinal Center Hypertrophy (increased germinal center T cells) Immune activation: GC hypertrophy followed by fibrosis Loss of non-germinal center T cells Direct infection: CD4 depletion

  26. Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases National Institutes of Health Immunology Laboratory NIAID/NCI Collaborators Michael Gerner Ron Germain Costas Petrovas Takuya Yamamoto Kristin Boswell Joseph Casazza Rob Paris David Ambrozak Lab Animal Medicine John-Paul Todd Srinivas Rao Human Immunology Section Netanya Sandler Daniel Douek ImmunoTechnology Section Mario Roederer

More Related