HIV-1 antigen-specific and -nonspecific B cell responses are sensitive to combination antiretroviral therapy

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Abstract

We studied how combination antiviral therapy affects B cell abnormalities associated with HIV-1 infection, namely elevated circulating immunoglobulin (Ig)G antibody-secreting cell (ASC) frequencies and hypergammaglobulinemia. Within a few weeks of starting antiviral therapy, there is a marked decline in IgG-ASC frequency in both acutely and chronically infected people, whereas the hypergammaglobulinemia often present during chronic infection is more gradually resolved. These reductions are sustained while HIV-1 replication is suppressed. HIV-1 antigen-specific B cell responses are also affected by therapy, manifested by a rapid decline in circulating gp120-specific ASCs. Anti-gp120 titers slowly decrease in chronically infected individuals and usually fail to mature in acutely infected individuals who were promptly treated with antiretroviral therapy. Long-term nonprogressors have high titer antibody responses to HIV-1 antigens, but no detectable gp120-specific IgG-ASC, and normal (or subnormal) levels of total circulating IgG-ASC. Overall, we conclude that HIV-1 infection drives B cell hyperactivity, and that this polyclonal activation is rapidly responsive to decreases in viral replication caused by combination antiviral therapy.

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APA

Morris, L., Binley, J. M., Clas, B. A., Bonhoeffer, S., Astill, T. P., Kost, R., … Moore, J. P. (1998). HIV-1 antigen-specific and -nonspecific B cell responses are sensitive to combination antiretroviral therapy. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 188(2), 233–245. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.188.2.233

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