T-cell and Soluble Co-inhibitory Receptor Expression in Patients With Visceral Leishmaniasis Are Markers of Treatment Response and Clinical Outcome.

Journal: Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Co-inhibitory receptors (immune checkpoints) regulate activated immune cells. Their expression on T cells can limit host defense. We hypothesized that chronic Leishmania donovani infection in patients with visceral leishmaniasis (VL) leads to expression of co-inhibitory receptors that could be markers of treatment response and clinical outcome. A prospective cohort of 21 subjects with VL (7 with HIV coinfection) and 10 controls was established to measure T-cell expression of co-inhibitory receptors (PD-1, Tim-3, LAG-3, CTLA-4, and TIGIT) by flow cytometry in discarded remnants of diagnostic splenic or bone marrow aspirates and peripheral blood collected before and after treatment. Plasma levels of soluble co-inhibitory proteins (sPD-1, sTim-3, sLAG-3, and sCTLA-4) and selected cytokines were determined by immunoassay. Expression of co-inhibitory receptors in peripheral blood T cells generally reflected findings in spleen and bone marrow aspirates. PD-1 and Tim-3 were upregulated in CD4+ T cells in HIV-negative and HIV-positive subjects with VL compared to controls. CD8+ T cells from HIV-negative subjects with VL displayed a similar pattern. Plasma levels of sPD-1 and sTim-3 were also greater in VL patients than controls. CD8+ and CD4+ T cells coexpressing PD-1 and Tim-3 showed considerable decline with treatment. Mortality in HIV-negative VL patients was associated with increased CD8+ T cells coexpressing Tim-3 and PD-1, triple-positive CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (PD-1+Tim-3+LAG-3+), and elevated sLAG3. Tim-3 and PD-1 expression on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and increased plasma sLAG-3, were markers of treatment response and clinical outcome in patients with VL.

Authors
Muluneh Ademe, Yaneth Osorio, Helina Fikre, Desalegn Adane, Tadele Mulaw, Bruno Travi, Rawliegh Howe, Asrat Hailu, Tamrat Abebe, Peter Melby
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS, Leishmaniasis