Innate Lymphoid Cell Activation and Sustained Depletion in Blood and Tissue of Children Infected with HIV from Birth Despite Antiretroviral Therapy

Biology Biology
Genomics Genomics
Immunology Immunology
Infectious Disease Infectious Disease
Alex K. Shalek Alex K. Shalek
Sam Kazer Sam Kazer

Singh et al.▾ Singh, A., Kazer, S.W., Roider, J., Krista, K.C., Millar, J., Asowata, O.E., Ngoepe, A., Ramsuran, D., Fardoos, R., Ardain, A., Muenchhoff, M., Kuhn, W., Karim, F., Ndung’u, T., Shalek, A.K., Goulder, P., Leslie, A., Kløverpris, H.N.

Cell Reports , Volume 32

September, 2020

Abstract

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are important for response to infection and for immune development in early life. HIV infection in adults depletes circulating ILCs, but the impact on children infected from birth remains unknown. We study vertically HIV-infected children from birth to adulthood and find severe and persistent depletion of all circulating ILCs that, unlike CD4+ T cells, are not restored by long-term antiretroviral therapy unless initiated at birth. Remaining ILCs upregulate genes associated with cellular activation and metabolic perturbation. Unlike HIV-infected adults, ILCs are also profoundly depleted in tonsils of vertically infected children. Transcriptional profiling of remaining ILCs reveals ongoing cell-type-specific activity despite anti-retroviral therapy. Collectively, these data suggest an important and ongoing role for ILCs in lymphoid tissue of HIV-infected children from birth, where persistent depletion and sustained transcriptional activity are likely to have long-term immune consequences that merit further investigation.