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Elevated glutamate impedes anti-HIV-1 CD8 + T cell responses in HIV-1-infected individuals on antiretroviral therapy

Communications Biology [2023]
Wang You-Yuan, Zhen Cheng, Hu Wei, Huang Hui-Huang, Li Yan-Jun, Zhou Ming-Ju, Li Jing, Fu Yu-Long, Zhang Peng, Li Xiao-Yu, Yang Tao, Song Jin-Wen, Fan Xing, Zou Jun, Meng Si-Run, Qin Ya-Qin, Jiao Yan-Mei, Xu Ruonan, Zhang Ji-Yuan, Zhou Chun-Bao, Yuan Jin-Hong, Huang Lei, Shi Ming, Cheng Liang, Wang Fu-Sheng, Zhang Chao
ABSTRACT

CD8 + T cells are essential for long-lasting HIV-1 control and have been harnessed to develop therapeutic and preventive approaches for people living with HIV-1 (PLWH). HIV-1 infection induces marked metabolic alterations. However, it is unclear whether these changes affect the anti-HIV function of CD8 + T cells. Here, we show that PLWH exhibit higher levels of plasma glutamate than healthy controls. In PLWH, glutamate levels positively correlate with HIV-1 reservoir and negatively correlate with the anti-HIV function of CD8 + T cells. Single-cell metabolic modeling reveals glutamate metabolism is surprisingly robust in virtual memory CD8 + T cells (TVM). We further confirmed that glutamate inhibits TVM cells function via the mTORC1 pathway in vitro. Our findings reveal an association between metabolic plasticity and CD8 + T cell-mediated HIV control, suggesting that glutamate metabolism can be exploited as a therapeutic target for the reversion of anti-HIV CD8 + T cell function in PLWH.

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