Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3352933 | Immunity | 2015 | 14 Pages |
•Onset of HIV viremia induces a massive HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response•Timing and strength of initial HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response impact viral load•IFN-γ secretion is an inadequate measure of CD8+ T cell responses in acute infection•The initial CD8+ T cell response fails to upregulate molecules for long-term memory
SummaryCD8+ T cells contribute to the control of HIV, but it is not clear whether initial immune responses modulate the viral set point. We screened high-risk uninfected women twice a week for plasma HIV RNA and identified 12 hyperacute infections. Onset of viremia elicited a massive HIV-specific CD8+ T cell response, with limited bystander activation of non-HIV memory CD8+ T cells. HIV-specific CD8+ T cells secreted little interferon-γ, underwent rapid apoptosis, and failed to upregulate the interleukin-7 receptor, known to be important for T cell survival. The rapidity to peak CD8+ T cell activation and the absolute magnitude of activation induced by the exponential rise in viremia were inversely correlated with set point viremia. These data indicate that rapid, high magnitude HIV-induced CD8+ T cell responses are crucial for subsequent immune control of acute infection, which has important implications for HIV vaccine design.