Lymphocyte homeostasis is maintained in perinatally HIV-infected patients after three decades of life

Abstract Background While immunosenescence, defined as reduced production of new lymphocytes, restriction of T-cell receptor repertoire and telomeres shortening, has been extensively evaluated in HIV-infected children and adults, no data about these parameters are available in perinatally-infected p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Paghera, E. Quiros-Roldan, A. Sottini, M. Properzi, F. Castelli, L. Imberti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Immunity & Ageing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12979-019-0166-7
Description
Summary:Abstract Background While immunosenescence, defined as reduced production of new lymphocytes, restriction of T-cell receptor repertoire and telomeres shortening, has been extensively evaluated in HIV-infected children and adults, no data about these parameters are available in perinatally-infected patients with very long-lasting HIV infection. Methods We compared thymic and bone marrow output, telomere length (measured by Real-Time PCR) and T-cell receptor repertoire (determined by spectratyping) of 21 perinatally HIV-infected subjects (with a median of 27 years of infection) with those of 19 age-matched non-perinatally HIV-infected patients and 40 healthy controls. All patients received a combined antiretroviral therapy. Results While thymic and bone marrow output were not different among the analyzed groups, telomere length in peripheral blood cells and T-cell receptor diversity were significantly lower in HIV-perinatally and non-perinatally infected individuals compared to healthy controls. Conclusions In HIV-infected subjects, a normal thymic output together with a reduced telomere length and a restricted T-cell receptor repertoire could be explained by the shift of newly produced cells into memory subsets. This phenomenon may allow to control viral infection and maintain peripheral homeostasis.
ISSN:1742-4933