immunopathogenesis of aids, an historical perspective:
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Immunopathogenesis of AIDS, an historical perspective:. Or 30 years in 15 minutes. Michael M. Lederman, MD. Dec 10, 1981. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and mucosal candidiasis in previously healthy homosexual men: evidence of a new acquired cellular immunodeficiency - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Immunopathogenesis of AIDS, an historical perspective:
Or 30 years in 15 minutesMichael M. Lederman, MD
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Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and mucosal candidiasis in previously healthy homosexual men: evidence of a new acquired cellular immunodeficiency
MS Gottlieb, R Schroff, HM Schanker, JD Weisman, PT Fan, RA Wolf, and A Saxon
An outbreak of community-acquired Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia: initial manifestation of cellular immune dysfunction
H Masur, MA Michelis, JB Greene, I Onorato, RA Stouwe, RS Holzman, G Wormser, L Brettman, M Lange, HW Murray, and S Cunningham-Rundles
Dec 10, 1981
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Barre-Sinoussi et al,Science 1983
Popovic et al Science,1984Levy et al Science, 1984
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antigen
Central memory cells
Effector cells
Naïve T cells antigen
Lymph Node
The lymph node in HIV infection is inflammatory and enriched with effector T
cells
Peripheraltissues
Homeostaticproliferation
Tenner Racz ‘93Cheynier ’94Pantaleo ‘94Altfeld ‘02Brenchley ‘04Biancotto ‘07
See Wednesday LB: JC Mudd
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Increased fibrosis in the HIV+lymph node
Estes, Schacker and Haase
Predicts failure of CD4 T cell restoration on HAARTSchacker AIDS ‘05
Impairs intercellular communicationZeng et al, JCI ‘11
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antigen
Central memory cell
Effector cell
Naïve T cells
Homeostatic proliferation(IL-7 dependent)
Thymus
antigen
Lymph Node
CD4 T cell homeostasis is broadly impaired in HIV infection
Bone Marrow
Periphery
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Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and mucosal candidiasis in previously healthy homosexual men: evidence of a new acquired cellular immunodeficiency
MS Gottlieb, R Schroff, HM Schanker, JD Weisman, PT Fan, RA Wolf, and A Saxon
An outbreak of community-acquired Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia: initial manifestation of cellular immune dysfunction
H Masur, MA Michelis, JB Greene, I Onorato, RA Stouwe, RS Holzman, G Wormser, L Brettman, M Lange, HW Murray, and S Cunningham-Rundles
Dec 10, 1981
T10 = CD38
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Immune activation predicts HIV disease progression
• Immune activation predicts HIV disease progression
– CD38 – a better predictor of disease progression than VL. (Liu JAIDS ’98, Giorgi JID ’99, Deeks ’04, Wilson ‘04)
Janice Giorgi
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High turnover of both CD4 and CD8 T cells in HIV infection is attenuated by
antiviral therapy
Kovacs et al J Exp Med ‘01
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So if immune activation drives HIV pathogenesis (CD4 depletion),what drives
immune activation?• A homeostatic response to cytopenia? (Srinivasula et al ‘11)
• HIV itself? – Via antigen specific T cell activation and expansion?– Via products such as envelope that bind and activate
cellular coreceptors? (Herbeuval et al ‘05)
– Via viral elements that activate innate immune receptors? (Heil et al ‘04, Fontaneau et al ’04, Meier et al ‘07)
• An immune deficient environment that permits replication of other microbes (eg CMV, other herpesviruses, HCV) (Lisco et al ‘09, Hunt et al ’11)
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HIV infection rapidly depletes gut effector memory CD4 T cells
Brenchley et al JEM 2004
HIV- HIV+
Veazey ’98; Guadalupe ’03; Mehandru ‘04Matapallil ‘05
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Plasma LPS levels are increased in chronic HIV infection
Brenchley et al, Nat Med 06
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Levels of microbial products correlate inversely with magnitude of CD4 T cell
restoration on HAART
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 1600
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
R² = 0.251623364284143
Plasma 16s DNA levels copies/ul
CD
4 T
cel
l inc
reas
e at
48
wee
ks
Jiang et al J Inf Dis ‘09 Brenchley et al Nat Med ‘06
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HIV disease is characterized by heightened inflammation and coagulation
• The environment in both blood and lymph nodes is inflammatory (Pantaleo ‘94, Andersson ‘00, Biancotto ‘07, Kalayjian ‘10)
• Indices of inflammation (IL-6, CRP) and coagulation (d-dimers) predict all cause mortality (Kuller ‘08)
• Activated CD4 T cells show signatures of high level type 1 interferon exposure (Sedhagat ‘08)
And Immune Cells show signs of exhaustion and senescence• Increased expression of CD57, PD-1, shortened
telomeres (Vanham ‘90; Effros ’96; Trautmann ‘06, Day ‘06; Petrovas ‘06)
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Naive
CM
CM
Naive
Naive
Naive
CM
CMAPC
CM
CM
CM
APC
APC
A model of immune activation and pathogenesis in the HIV+ lymph node
E
E
E
E
E
ME
E
EE
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100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800
CD4
0%
5%
10%
15%
Perc
ent
Even after > 5 yrs of HAART and current VL BLD, ~20% of adult pts have CD4 T cell counts below the defined
normal range
>5 yearsValid N 340Median 609Percentile 25 412Percentile 75 802Percentile 2.5 122.525Percentile 97.5 1417.88Minimum 48Maximum 1822
2, 740Normal (95%) range
Rodriguez, Myerson
350
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Despite “complete” virologic control on ARVs, immune failure patients have
increased T cell activation– Teixiera AIDS ’01: age and low thymic output– Anthony JAIDS ’03: immune activation and turnover– Benveniste JID ‘05: Low thymic output– Fernandez Clin Imm ‘06: immune activation and senescence– Gandhi JAIDS ‘06: women restore better– Hunt JID ‘08 Immune activation and microbial translocation– Marchetti AIDS ‘08: immune activation and microbial translocation– Rajasuriar JID ‘10: Linkage to IL-7Ra haplotype– Sandler et al JID (in press) immune activation and microbia– Gazzola CID ‘09: Excellent review of immune failure
Fernandez ’06; Hunt ‘08; Marchetti ‘08; Sandler ’11; Lederman ‘11
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Though both CD4 and CD8 T cells are activated in Immune Failure, cell cycling is
increased only among CD4 T cells
_____P<0.001_____________
__P<0.001___
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Increased inflammation, coagulation and evidence of monocyte activation in immune failure despite virologic
control
____p < 0.09_____
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What we know• HIV is the cause of AIDS• HIV linked to immune
activation; plausible drivers of activation identified
• Immune activation is linked to disease course
• Inflammatory cytokine levels are increased
What we don’t know• Exactly how HIV causes AIDS• Which “drivers” are most
important in which setting
• Causality likely; proof lacking
• Which cytokines mediate pathogenesis; which are just markers of infection?
• Will blocking these pathways block activation?
• Will blocking these pathways alter disease course?
• To what degree and at what point are these pathways reversible?
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Immune Failure despite virologic controlWhat we know• Increased T cell
activation; increased CD4 T cell cycling
• Increased coagulation and inflammation
What we don’t know• How much T cell
activation is “push” and how much is “pull”? – And among plausible
“pushers” which pathways are most important?
• What is the link between T cell activation and inflammation/coagulation
• The degree to which “drivers” and mediators of morbidity in immune failure are linked to the drivers of pathogenesis in untreated HIV infection?
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A Way Forward• Interventional Trials targeting key
pathways of “activation” can concurrently test hypotheses of pathogenesis and also explore promising treatment strategies for persons at risk for morbidity
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Thanks to: CWRU:
Scott SiegBenigno RodriguezJC MuddNick Funderburg
Brian ClagettLen CalabreseCarey ShiveWei Jiang
VGTI:Rafick SekalyElias HaddadNicolas Chomont
Lydie TrautmannRush:
Alan Landay
NIH Jason Brenchley Danny Douek Netanya Sandler Mary Carrington Leonid Margolis Irini Sereti Jake Estes Emory Guido Silvestri Mirko PaiardiniDrexel Jeffrey JacobsonU. Minnesota Tim Schacker
UCSF: Steven Deeks Peter Hunt Hiroyu HatanoU. Penn Mike BettsU. Paris Yves Levy