Polyclonal B Cell Differentiation and Loss of Gastrointestinal Tract Germinal Centers in the Earliest Stages of HIV-1 Infection

Marc C. Levesque(Duke University), M. Anthony Moody(Duke University), Kwan-Ki Hwang(Duke University), Dawn J. Marshall(Duke University), John F. Whitesides(Duke University), Joshua D. Amos(Duke University), Thaddeus C. Gurley(Duke University), Sallie D. Allgood(Duke University), Benjamin B. Haynes(Duke University), Nathan Vandergrift(Duke University), Steven G. Plonk(Duke University), Daniel Parker(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Myron S. Cohen(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Georgia D. Tomaras(Duke University), Paul A. Goepfert(University of Alabama at Birmingham), George M. Shaw(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Jörn E. Schmitz(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Joseph J. Eron(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Nicholas J. Shaheen(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Charles B. Hicks(Duke University), Hua-Xin Liao(Duke University), Martin Markowitz(Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center), Garnett Kelsoe(Duke University), David M. Margolis(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Barton F. Haynes(Duke University)
PLoS Medicine
July 6, 2009
Cited by 184Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The antibody response to HIV-1 does not appear in the plasma until approximately 2-5 weeks after transmission, and neutralizing antibodies to autologous HIV-1 generally do not become detectable until 12 weeks or more after transmission. Moreover, levels of HIV-1-specific antibodies decline on antiretroviral treatment. The mechanisms of this delay in the appearance of anti-HIV-1 antibodies and of their subsequent rapid decline are not known. While the effect of HIV-1 on depletion of gut CD4(+) T cells in acute HIV-1 infection is well described, we studied blood and tissue B cells soon after infection to determine the effect of early HIV-1 on these cells. METHODS AND FINDINGS: In human participants, we analyzed B cells in blood as early as 17 days after HIV-1 infection, and in terminal ileum inductive and effector microenvironments beginning at 47 days after infection. We found that HIV-1 infection rapidly induced polyclonal activation and terminal differentiation of B cells in blood and in gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) B cells. The specificities of antibodies produced by GALT memory B cells in acute HIV-1 infection (AHI) included not only HIV-1-specific antibodies, but also influenza-specific and autoreactive antibodies, indicating very early onset of HIV-1-induced polyclonal B cell activation. Follicular damage or germinal center loss in terminal ileum Peyer's patches was seen with 88% of follicles exhibiting B or T cell apoptosis and follicular lysis. CONCLUSIONS: Early induction of polyclonal B cell differentiation, coupled with follicular damage and germinal center loss soon after HIV-1 infection, may explain both the high rate of decline in HIV-1-induced antibody responses and the delay in plasma antibody responses to HIV-1. Please see later in the article for Editors' Summary.


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