Impairment of CCR6+ and CXCR3+ Th Cell Migration in HIV-1 Infection Is Rescued by Modulating Actin Polymerization
Open Access
- 1 January 2017
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The American Association of Immunologists in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 198 (1), 184-195
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1600568
Abstract
CD4+ T cell repopulation of the gut is rarely achieved in HIV-1–infected individuals who are receiving clinically effective antiretroviral therapy. Alterations in the integrity of the mucosal barrier have been indicated as a cause for chronic immune activation and disease progression. In this study, we present evidence that persistent immune activation causes impairment of lymphocytes to respond to chemotactic stimuli, thus preventing their trafficking from the blood stream to peripheral organs. CCR6+ and CXCR3+ Th cells accumulate in the blood of aviremic HIV-1–infected patients on long-term antiretroviral therapy, and their frequency in the circulation positively correlates to levels of soluble CD14 in plasma, a marker of chronic immune activation. Th cells show an impaired response to chemotactic stimuli both in humans and in the pathogenic model of SIV infection, and this defect is due to hyperactivation of cofilin and inefficient actin polymerization. Taking advantage of a murine model of chronic immune activation, we demonstrate that cytoskeleton remodeling, induced by okadaic acid, restores lymphocyte migration in response to chemokines, both in vitro and in vivo. This study calls for novel pharmacological approaches in those pathological conditions characterized by persistent immune activation and loss of trafficking of T cell subsets to niches that sustain their maturation and activities.Keywords
This publication has 64 references indexed in Scilit:
- HIV-1 Nef interferes with T-lymphocyte circulation through confined environments in vivoProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012
- Fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysisNature Methods, 2012
- LIM Kinase 1 Modulates Cortical Actin and CXCR4 Cycling and Is Activated by HIV-1 to Initiate Viral InfectionJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2011
- Susceptibility of Human Th17 Cells to Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Their Perturbation during InfectionThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2010
- α4+β7hiCD4+ memory T cells harbor most Th-17 cells and are preferentially infected during acute SIV infectionMucosal Immunology, 2009
- The roles of CCR6 in migration of Th17 cells and regulation of effector T-cell balance in the gutMucosal Immunology, 2009
- HIV Envelope-CXCR4 Signaling Activates Cofilin to Overcome Cortical Actin Restriction in Resting CD4 T CellsCell, 2008
- Altered balance between Th17 and Th1 cells at mucosal sites predicts AIDS progression in simian immunodeficiency virus-infected macaquesMucosal Immunology, 2008
- Simian immunodeficiency virus–induced mucosal interleukin-17 deficiency promotes Salmonella dissemination from the gutNature Medicine, 2008
- Microbial translocation is a cause of systemic immune activation in chronic HIV infectionNature Medicine, 2006