Antigenic stimulation of T cells gives rise to short-lived effector cells and long-lived memory cells. We used two stable isotope-labeling techniques to identify kinetically distinct subpopulations of T cells and to determine the effect of advanced infection with HIV-1. Long-term deuterated water (2H2O) incorporation into DNA demonstrated biphasic accrual of total and of memory/effector (m/e)-phenotype but not naive-phenotype T cells, consistent with the presence of short-lived and longer-lived subpopulations within the m/e-phenotype T cell pool. These results were mirrored by biphasic die-away kinetics in m/e- but not naive-phenotype T cells after short-term 2H-glucose labeling. Persistent label retention was observed in a subset of m/e-phenotype T cells (presumably memory T cells), confirming the presence of T cells with very different life spans in humans. In advanced HIV-1 infection, much higher proportions of T cells were short-lived, compared to healthy controls. Effective long-term anti-retroviral therapy restored values to normal. These results provide the first quantitative evidence that long-lived and quiescent T cells do indeed predominate in the T cell pool in humans and determine T cell pool size, as in rodents. The greatest impact of advanced HIV-1 infection is to reduce the generation of long-lived, potential progenitor T cells.
Joseph M. McCune, Mary Beth Hanley, Denise Cesar, Robert A. Halvorsen, Rebecca Hoh, Diane Schmidt, Eric Wieder, Steven G. Deeks, Scott Q. Siler, Richard A. Neese, Marc Hellerstein
Charline Bacchus-Souffan, Mark Fitch, Jori Symons, Mohamed Abdel‐Mohsen, Daniel B. Reeves, Rebecca Hoh, Mars Stone, Joseph Hiatt, Peggy Kim, Abha Chopra, Haelee Ahn, Vanessa A. York, Daniel Cameron, Frederick Hecht, Jeffrey N. Martin, Steven A. Yukl, S. Mallal, Paul Cameron, Steven G. Deeks, Joshua T. Schiffer, Sharon R. Lewin, Marc Hellerstein, Joseph M. McCune, Peter W. Hunt
Hiroshi Mohri, Alan S. Perelson, K S Tung, Ruy M. Ribeiro, Bharat Ramratnam, Martin Markowitz, Rhonda G. Kost, Hurley, Leor S. Weinberger, Denise Cesar, Marc Hellerstein, David D. Ho
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