TB Research

CD4 T cells are rapidly depleted from tuberculosis granulomas following acute SIV co-infection

Taylor W. Foreman, Christine E Nelson, Keith D. Kauffman, Nickiana E. Lora, Caian L. Vinhaes, Danielle E. Dorosky, Shunsuke Sakai, Felipe Gómez, et al. (19 authors)

Cell Reports · 2022-05

Abstract

HIV/Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) co-infected individuals have an increased risk of tuberculosis prior to loss of peripheral CD4 T cells, raising the possibility that HIV co-infection leads to CD4 T cell depletion in lung tissue before it is evident in blood. Here, we use rhesus macaques to study the early effects of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) co-infection on pulmonary granulomas. Two weeks after SIV inoculation of Mtb-infected macaques, Mtb-specific CD4 T cells are dramatically depleted from granulomas, before CD4 T cell loss in blood, airways, and lymph nodes, or increases in bacterial loads or radiographic evidence of disease. Spatially, CD4 T cells are preferentially depleted from the granuloma core and cuff relative to B cell-rich regions. Moreover, live imaging of granuloma explants show that intralesional CD4 T cell motility is reduced after SIV co-infection. Thus, granuloma CD4 T cells may be decimated before many co-infected individuals experience the first symptoms of acute HIV infection.

MeSH terms

  • Granuloma
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Lymph
  • Simian immunodeficiency virus
  • Immunology
  • Biology
  • Lung
  • Virus
  • Virology
  • T cell
  • Pathology
  • Medicine