- Cavrois, Marielle;
- Banerjee, Trambak;
- Mukherjee, Gourab;
- Raman, Nandhini;
- Hussien, Rajaa;
- Rodriguez, Brandon Aguilar;
- Vasquez, Joshua;
- Spitzer, Matthew H;
- Lazarus, Nicole H;
- Jones, Jennifer J;
- Ochsenbauer, Christina;
- McCune, Joseph M;
- Butcher, Eugene C;
- Arvin, Ann M;
- Sen, Nandini;
- Greene, Warner C;
- Roan, Nadia R
To characterize susceptibility to HIV infection, we phenotyped infected tonsillar T cells by single-cell mass cytometry and created comprehensive maps to identify which subsets of CD4+ T cells support HIV fusion and productive infection. By comparing HIV-fused and HIV-infected cells through dimensionality reduction, clustering, and statistical approaches to account for viral perturbations, we identified a subset of memory CD4+ T cells that support HIV entry but not viral gene expression. These cells express high levels of CD127, the IL-7 receptor, and are believed to be long-lived lymphocytes. In HIV-infected patients, CD127-expressing cells preferentially localize to extrafollicular lymphoid regions with limited viral replication. Thus, CyTOF-based phenotyping, combined with analytical approaches to distinguish between selective infection and receptor modulation by viruses, can be used as a discovery tool.