HIV-1 treatment timing shapes the human intestinal memory B-cell repertoire to commensal bacteria

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS(2023)

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摘要
HIV-1 infection causes severe alterations of gut mucosa, microbiota and immune system, which can be curbed by early antiretroviral therapy. Here, we investigate how treatment timing affects intestinal memory B-cell and plasmablast repertoires of HIV-1-infected humans. We show that only class-switched memory B cells markedly differ between subjects treated during the acute and chronic phases of infection. Intestinal memory B-cell monoclonal antibodies show more prevalent polyreactive and commensal bacteria-reactive clones in late- compared to early-treated individuals. Mirroring this, serum IgA polyreactivity and commensal-reactivity are strongly increased in late-treated individuals and correlate with intestinal permeability and systemic inflammatory markers. Polyreactive blood IgA memory B cells, many of which egressed from the gut, are also substantially enriched in late-treated individuals. Our data establish gut and systemic B-cell polyreactivity to commensal bacteria as hallmarks of chronic HIV-1 infection and suggest that initiating treatment early may limit intestinal B-cell abnormalities compromising HIV-1 humoral response. HIV-1 infection is known to impact the gut mucosa, effecting the microbiota and immune system, but early antiretroviral therapy is linked to partial reversal of this phenomena. Here the authors explore the impact of early commencement of antiretroviral therapy and show this can limit the abnormal responses of intestinal B cells associated with HIV-1 infection.
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