Abstract
Chronic human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection in patients leads to multi-lineage hematopoietic abnormalities or pancytopenia. The deficiency in hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) induced by HIV-1 infection has been proposed, but the relevant mechanisms are poorly understood. We report here that both human CD34+CD38-early and CD34+CD38+intermediate HPCs were maintained in the bone marrow (BM) of humanized mice. Chronic HIV-1 infection preferentially depleted CD34+CD38-early HPCs in the BM and reduced their proliferation potential in vivo in both HIV-1-infected patients and humanized mice, while CD34+CD38+intermediate HSCs were relatively unaffected. Strikingly, depletion of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) prevented human CD34+CD38-early HPCs from HIV-1 infection-induced depletion and functional impairment and restored the gene expression profile of purified CD34+HPCs in humanized mice. These findings suggest that pDCs contribute to the early hematopoietic suppression induced by chronic HIV-1 infection and provide a novel therapeutic target for the hematopoiesis suppression in HIV-1 patients.
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CITATION STYLE
Li, G., Zhao, J., Cheng, L., Jiang, Q., Kan, S., Qin, E., … Zhang, Z. (2017). HIV-1 infection depletes human CD34+CD38-hematopoietic progenitor cells via pDC-dependent mechanisms. PLoS Pathogens, 13(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006505
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