Coinfection with HIV-1 skews iNKT cells toward TCR anergy and limited expansion potential in people with hepatitis C
Danielle Nettere, Scott White, Grant Williams, Shalini Jha, M. Anthony Moody, Cliburn Chan, Guido Ferrari, Susanna Naggie

TL;DR
HIV-1 co-infection with hepatitis C alters iNKT cells, reducing their ability to expand and contributing to worse liver outcomes.
Contribution
This study reveals how HIV/HCV co-infection impairs iNKT cell function, offering new insights into immune dysfunction in coinfected individuals.
Findings
iNKT cells from HIV/HCV coinfected individuals show impaired expansion to TCR stimulation.
HIV/HCV coinfected individuals have enriched CD8+ and CD57+ iNKT subsets, indicating terminal differentiation.
HCV monoinfection has minimal impact on iNKT cell phenotypes compared to controls.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Liver fibrosis progression is more rapid in people with HIV/HCV coinfection compared to HCV monoinfection and the rate of resolution of liver fibrosis after HCV cure is unknown in people with HIV. Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells are enriched in the liver and play important roles in initiating immune responses to hepatotropic pathogens and promoting healing following injury. It was recently reported that the pro-healing CD4+ iNKT cells are preferentially infected and depleted in early HIV infection, but this effect on HCV-related liver disease outcomes is unclear. Here we examined and compared peripheral blood iNKT cells from people with HIV/HCV coinfection and people with HIV and HCV monoinfection or no infection (controls). We evaluated the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImmune Cell Function and Interaction · Renal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments · Hepatitis C virus research
