Dendritic cells from HIV controllers have low susceptibility to HIV-1 infection in vitro but high capacity to capture HIV-1 particles

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Abstract

HIV controllers (HICs), rare HIV-1 infected individuals able to control viral replication without antiretroviral therapy, are characterized by an efficient polyfunctional and cytolytic HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response. The mechanisms underlying the induction and maintenance of such response in many HICs despite controlled viremia are not clear. Dendritic cells play a crucial role in the generation and reactivation of T cell responses but scarce information is available on those cells in HICs. We found that monocyte derived dendritic cells (MDDCs) from HICs are less permissive to HIV-1 infection than cells from healthy donors. In contrast MDDCs from HICs are particularly efficient at capturing HIV-1 particles when compared to cells from healthy donors or HIV-1 patients with suppressed viral load on antiretroviral treatment. MDDCs from HICs expressed on their surface high levels of syndecan-3, DC-SIGN and MMR, which could cooperate to facilitate HIV-1 capture. The combination of low susceptibility to HIV-1 infection but enhanced capacity to capture particles might allow MDDCs from HICs to preserve their function from the deleterious effect of infection while facilitating induction of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells by cross-presentation in a context of low viremia.

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APA

Hamimi, C., David, A., Versmisse, P., Eiss, L., Bruel, T., Zucman, D., … Sáez-Cirión, A. (2016). Dendritic cells from HIV controllers have low susceptibility to HIV-1 infection in vitro but high capacity to capture HIV-1 particles. PLoS ONE, 11(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160251

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