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Polyclonal B Cell Differentiation and Loss of Gastrointestinal Tract Germinal Centers in the Earliest Stages of HIV-1 Infection
Authors:Marc C Levesque  M Anthony Moody  Kwan-Ki Hwang  Dawn J Marshall  John F Whitesides  Joshua D Amos  Thaddeus C Gurley  Sallie Allgood  Benjamin B Haynes  Nathan A Vandergrift  Steven Plonk  Daniel C Parker  Myron S Cohen  Georgia D Tomaras  Paul A Goepfert  George M Shaw  J?rn E Schmitz  Joseph J Eron  Nicholas J Shaheen  Charles B Hicks  Hua-Xin Liao  Martin Markowitz  Garnett Kelsoe  David M Margolis  Barton F Haynes
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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