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IL-15 enhances HIV-1 infection by promoting survival and proliferation of CCR5+CD4+ T cells
Yuhao Li, Hongbo Gao, Kolin M. Clark, Liang Shan
Yuhao Li, Hongbo Gao, Kolin M. Clark, Liang Shan
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Research Article AIDS/HIV Immunology

IL-15 enhances HIV-1 infection by promoting survival and proliferation of CCR5+CD4+ T cells

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Abstract

HIV-1 usually utilizes CCR5 as its coreceptor and rarely switches to a CXCR4-tropic virus until the late stage of infection. CCR5+CD4+ T cells are the major virus-producing cells in viremic individuals as well as SIV-infected nonhuman primates. The differentiation of CCR5+CD4+ T cells is associated with the availability of IL-15, which increases during acute HIV-1 infection. Here, we report that CCR5 was expressed by CD4+ T cells exhibiting effector or effector memory phenotypes with high expression levels of the IL-2/IL-15 receptor common β and γ chains. IL-15, but not IL-7, improved the survival of CCR5+CD4+ T cells, drove their expansion, and facilitated HIV-1 infection in vitro and in humanized mice. Our study suggests that IL-15 plays confounding roles in HIV-1 infection, and future studies on the IL-15–based boosting of anti–HIV-1 immunity should carefully examine the potential effects on the expansion of HIV-1 reservoirs in CCR5+CD4+ T cells.

Authors

Yuhao Li, Hongbo Gao, Kolin M. Clark, Liang Shan

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Figure 3

Transcriptional and phenotypic profiling of CCR5+CD4+ T cells.

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Transcriptional and phenotypic profiling of CCR5+CD4+ T cells.
(A–C) Act...
(A–C) Activated blood CD4+ T cells were cultured in the presence of IL-15 for 6 days. CCR5+ and CCR5– cells were purified by sorting for RNA-Seq (A and B) or mass cytometry (C). (A) Volcano plot of 1,602 genes differentially expressed in CCR5+ and CCR5– cells. (B) Heatmap of genes associated with T cell activation and their relative expression levels in CCR5+ and CCR5– cells. (C) viSNE plots show cell density or expression levels of indicated genes. CD4+ T cells from 2 blood donors were included.

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