Publications by authors named "Amelie Pagliuzza"

Background: Despite successful antiretroviral therapy (ART), frequencies and immunological functions of memory CCR6 Th17-polarised CD4 T-cells are not fully restored in people with HIV (PWH). Moreover, long-lived Th17 cells contribute to HIV persistence under ART. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these observations remain understudied.

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  • The study investigates the reemergence of Kaposi sarcoma (KS) in people living with HIV who are on antiretroviral therapy (ART), suggesting that age-related immune decline (immunosenescence) may play a role.
  • Researchers compared data, including immune responses and viral factors, from both HIV KS patients and classic KS patients who are HIV-uninfected, while also including age-matched controls.
  • Findings indicate that despite younger ages and favorable CD4 counts in HIV KS patients, their immune profiles are similar to those of older cKS patients, pointing towards the need for new strategies to prevent and treat KS in individuals receiving ART.
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  • - The study analyzes plasma samples from 318 COVID-19 patients to understand how RNAemia, delayed antibody responses, and inflammation affect patient outcomes, revealing four distinct patient clusters based on severity and survival probability.
  • - Critically ill patients were categorized into good prognosis and high-fatality clusters, while non-critical survivors were divided into high and low early antibody responders, each showing different patterns in antibody development and inflammation.
  • - The findings indicate that high-fatality patients have specific genomic signatures linked to severe COVID-19, and both critical and non-critical patients with delayed antibody responses exhibit persistent interferon (IFN) activity, suggesting that high IFN levels might hinder the body's ability to build effective immunity.
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Throughout the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, several variants of concern (VOCs) have been identified, many of which share recurrent mutations in the spike glycoprotein's receptor-binding domain (RBD). This region coincides with known epitopes and can therefore have an impact on immune escape. Protracted infections in immunosuppressed patients have been hypothesized to lead to an enrichment of such mutations and therefore drive evolution towards VOCs.

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  • Dimensionality reduction methods like PHATE, t-SNE, and UMAP help visualize complex biological data, but they often do so without the guidance of expert labels.
  • The new method RF-PHATE combines expert knowledge with unsupervised techniques by using random forests to create low-dimensional visualizations that emphasize important data relationships while filtering out irrelevant features.
  • RF-PHATE is effective for large datasets and has been successfully applied in multiple case studies, showing its ability to handle time-series data in multiple sclerosis research, analyze noisy Raman spectral data, and connect geometric structures with COVID-19 outcomes.
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Interleukin 32 (IL-32) is a potent multi-isoform proinflammatory cytokine, which is upregulated in people with HIV (PWH) and is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. However, the impact of IL-32 isoforms on CD4 T-cell cardiotropism, a mechanism potentially contributing to heart inflammation, remains unknown. Here we show that IL-32 isoforms β and γ induce the generation of CCR4+CXCR3+ double positive (DP) memory CD4 T-cell subpopulation expressing the tyrosine kinase receptor c-Met, a phenotype associated with heart-homing of T cells.

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Antiretroviral therapy (ART) for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can control virus replication and prolong the life of people living with HIV (PLWH). However, the virus remains dormant within immune cells in what is called the HIV reservoir. Furthermore, 2.

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Objectives: Identifying biomarkers causing differential SARS-CoV-2 infection kinetics associated with severe COVID-19 is fundamental for effective diagnostics and therapeutic planning.

Methods: In this work, we applied mathematical modelling to investigate the relationships between patient characteristics, plasma SARS-CoV-2 RNA dynamics and COVID-19 severity. Using a straightforward mathematical model of within-host viral kinetics, we estimated key model parameters from serial plasma viral RNA (vRNA) samples from 256 hospitalised COVID-19 patients.

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Spontaneous transcription and translation of HIV can persist during suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART). The quantity, phenotype, and biological relevance of this spontaneously "active" reservoir remain unclear. Using multiplexed single-cell RNAflow-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), we detect active HIV transcription in 14/18 people with HIV on suppressive ART, with a median of 28/million CD4 T cells.

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Before initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART), HIV-specific CD8 T cells are dysfunctional and short lived. To better understand the relationship between the HIV reservoir in CD4 T cells and the magnitude and differentiation status of HIV-specific CD8 T cells, we investigated these cells from acute and chronic HIV-infected individuals after 2 years of ART. Although both the HIV reservoir and the CD8 T cell responses declined significantly after 2 years of ART, sustained HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses correlated with a greater reduction of integrated HIV provirus.

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  • HIV reservoirs persist in various tissues even during effective antiretroviral therapy, with significant differences observed between anatomical compartments and individuals.
  • Intact HIV genomes are primarily found in secondary lymphoid organs, such as the spleen and lymph nodes, comprising 2% and 25% of proviruses in the study participants.
  • Identical HIV genomes are frequently found across multiple tissues, indicating that infected cells can expand, migrate, and circulate among different anatomical sites.
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  • Ten individuals with HIV on ART participated in a 12-week study, receiving either a combination of THC and CBD or CBD only, with blood samples analyzed for cytokine levels and immune cell changes.
  • Results showed significant reductions in certain inflammatory markers and specific immune cell populations, suggesting cannabinoids may have beneficial effects, though no changes in HIV DNA/RNA levels were noted, warranting further studies.
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Elucidating the mechanisms underlying the persistence and location of the HIV reservoir is critical for developing cure interventions. While it has been shown that levels of T-cell activation and the size of the HIV reservoir are greater in rectal tissue and lymph nodes (LN) than in blood, the relative contributions of T-cell subsets to this anatomic difference are unknown. We measured and compared HIV-1 DNA content, expression of the T-cell activation markers CD38 and HLA-DR, and expression of the exhaustion markers programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and T-cell immunoreceptor with immunoglobulin and immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif domains (TIGIT) in naive, central memory (CM), transitional memory (TM), and effector memory (EM) CD4 and CD8 T-cells in paired blood and LN samples among 14 people with HIV who were receiving antiretroviral therapy.

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Upon infection, HIV disseminates throughout the human body within 1-2 weeks. However, its early cellular targets remain poorly characterized. We used a single-cell approach to retrieve the phenotype and TCR sequence of infected cells in blood and lymphoid tissue from individuals at the earliest stages of HIV infection.

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Pulmonary dysbiosis may predispose people living with HIV (PLWH) to chronic lung disease. Herein, we assessed whether intrapulmonary HIV reservoir size and immune disruption are associated with reduced bacterial lung diversity in PLWH. Bacterial DNA was extracted and PCR-amplified from cell-free bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from 28 PLWH and 9 HIV-negative controls.

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Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is not curative due to the persistence of a reservoir of HIV-infected cells, particularly in tissues such as lymph nodes, with the potential to cause viral rebound after treatment cessation. In this study, fingolimod (FTY720), a lysophospholipid sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulator is administered to SIV-infected rhesus macaques at initiation of ART to block the egress from lymphoid tissues of natural killer and T-cells, thereby promoting proximity between cytolytic cells and infected CD4+ T-cells. When compared with the ART-only controls, FTY720 treatment during the initial weeks of ART induces a profound lymphopenia and increases frequencies of CD8+ T-cells expressing perforin in lymph nodes, but not their killing capacity; FTY720 also increases frequencies of cytolytic NK cells in lymph nodes.

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Anti-retroviral therapy (ART) generally suppresses HIV replication to undetectable levels in peripheral blood, but immune activation associated with increased morbidity and mortality is sustained during ART, and infection rebounds when treatment is interrupted. To identify drivers of immune activation and potential sources of viral rebound, we modified RNAscope in situ hybridization to visualize HIV-producing cells as a standard against which to compare the following assays of potential sources of immune activation and virus rebound following treatment interruption: (i) envelope detection by induced transcription-based sequencing (EDITS) assay; (ii) HIV-Flow; (iii) Flow-FISH assays that can scan tissues and cell suspensions to detect rare cells expressing env mRNA, gag mRNA/Gag protein and p24; and (iv) an ultrasensitive immunoassay that detects p24 in cell/tissue lysates at subfemtomolar levels. We show that the sensitivities of these assays are sufficient to detect one rare HIV-producing/env mRNA/p24 cell in one million uninfected cells.

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Background: Early antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation (ie, within 3 months of infection) limits establishment of the HIV reservoir. However, the effect of early ART initiation on the long-term dynamics of the pool of infected cells remains unclear.

Methods: In this longitudinal analysis, we included cisgender men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (aged 18-54 years) at high risk for HIV infection, enrolled in the ongoing longitudinal MERLIN study in Peru between Oct 28, 2014, and Nov 8, 2018.

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T cells actively migrate along reticular networks within lymphoid organs in search for cognate antigen, but how these behaviors impact HIV entry and infection is unclear. Here, we show that migratory T cells in 3D collagen matrix display significantly enhanced infection and integration by cell-free R5-tropic lab adapted and transmitted/founder molecular HIV clones in the absence of exogenous cytokines or cationic polymers. Using two different collagen matrices that either support or restrict T cell migration, we observe high levels of HIV fusion in migratory T cells, whereas non-motile T cells display low viral entry and integration.

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Background: Early antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation (ie, within 3 months of infection) limits establishment of the HIV reservoir. However, the effect of early ART initiation on the long-term dynamics of the pool of infected cells remains unclear.

Methods: In this longitudinal analysis, we included cisgender men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (aged 18-54 years) at high risk for HIV infection, enrolled in the ongoing longitudinal MERLIN study in Peru between Oct 28, 2014, and Nov 8, 2018.

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Despite advances in COVID-19 management, identifying patients evolving toward death remains challenging. To identify early predictors of mortality within 60 days of symptom onset (DSO), we performed immunovirological assessments on plasma from 279 individuals. On samples collected at DSO11 in a discovery cohort, high severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) viral RNA (vRNA), low receptor binding domain–specific immunoglobulin G and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, and elevated cytokines and tissue injury markers were strongly associated with mortality, including in patients on mechanical ventilation.

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Acute HIV-1 infection (AHI) results in the widespread depletion of CD4 T cells in peripheral blood and gut mucosal tissue. However, the impact on the predominantly CD4 immunoregulatory invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells during AHI remains unknown. Here, iNKT cells from peripheral blood and colonic mucosa were investigated during treated and untreated AHI.

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Although understanding the diversity of HIV-1 reservoirs is key to achieving a cure, their study at the single-cell level in primary samples remains challenging. We combine flow cytometric multiplexed fluorescent in situ RNA hybridization for different viral genes with HIV-1 p24 protein detection, cell phenotyping, and downstream near-full-length single-cell vDNA sequencing. Stimulation-induced viral RNA-positive (vRNA) cells from viremic and antiretroviral-therapy (ART)-suppressed individuals differ in their ability to produce p24.

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Clinical outcomes are inferior for individuals with HIV having suboptimal CD4 T-cell recovery during antiretroviral therapy (ART). We investigated if the levels of infection and the response to homeostatic cytokines of CD4 T-cell subsets contributed to divergent CD4 T-cell recovery and HIV reservoir during ART by studying virologically-suppressed immunologic responders (IR, achieving a CD4 cell count >500 cells/μL on or before two years after ART initiation), and virologically-suppressed suboptimal responders (ISR, did not achieve a CD4 cell count >500 cells/μL in the first two years after ART initiation). Compared to IR, ISR demonstrated higher levels of HIV-DNA in naïve, central (CM), transitional (TM), and effector (EM) memory CD4 T-cells in blood, both pre- and on-ART, and specifically in CM CD4 T-cells in LN on-ART.

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Background: Chronic inflammation and residual HIV transcription persist in people living with HIV (PLWH) receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART), thus increasing the risk of developing non-AIDS co-morbidities. The mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a key regulator of cellular metabolism and HIV transcription, and therefore represents an interesting novel therapeutic target.

Methods: The LILAC pilot clinical trial, performed on non-diabetic ART-treated PLWH with CD4/CD8 T-cell ratios <0.

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