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Low-Level Anorectal HIV Shedding despite Effective Antiretroviral Therapy Is Not Driven by Mucosal Inflammation
Author(s) -
Yoojin Choi,
Sarah Grech,
Avid Mohammadi,
M. Perry,
Sanja Huibner,
Marie Sano,
Edward Weiss,
Bryan Coburn,
Irving E. Salit,
Rupert Kaul
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.2100270
Subject(s) - antiretroviral therapy , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , inflammation , medicine , viral shedding , antiretroviral agents , immunology , virology , viral load , virus
Although antiretroviral treatment (ART) suppresses HIV RNA in blood and prevents transmission, low-level anorectal HIV RNA shedding persists in some ART-treated men who have sex with men. We collected anorectal biopsies and swabs from 55 men who have sex with men on effective ART, hypothesizing that anorectal shedding would be linked to microbiota-driven mucosal T cell activation. Lymphocytes were assessed by flow cytometry, soluble immune factors by multiplex immunoassay, neutrophils and epithelial integrity by immunofluorescence microscopy, and the anorectal microbiome by quantitative PCR and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Unexpectedly, we found no evidence that anorectal HIV shedding was associated with the parameters of mucosal inflammation, including T cell activation, inflammatory cytokines, the density of neutrophils, or epithelial integrity. Moreover, the anorectal bacterial load was actually lower in the shedding group, with no major differences in bacterial composition. Instead, the strongest mucosal immune correlates of HIV shedding were an increase in central memory cell frequency and Ki67 expression as well as higher concentrations of the cytokine IL-7 in anorectal secretions. Anorectal HIV RNA shedding during effective ART was not driven by local inflammation; the associations seen with local homeostatic T cell proliferation will require further confirmation.

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