- Rutishauser, Rachel L;
- Deguit, Christian Deo T;
- Hiatt, Joseph;
- Blaeschke, Franziska;
- Roth, Theodore L;
- Wang, Lynn;
- Raymond, Kyle A;
- Starke, Carly E;
- Mudd, Joseph C;
- Chen, Wenxuan;
- Smullin, Carolyn P;
- Matus-Nicodemos, Rodrigo;
- Hoh, Rebecca;
- Krone, Melissa R;
- Hecht, Frederick M;
- Pilcher, Christopher D;
- Martin, Jeffrey N;
- Koup, Richard A;
- Douek, Daniel C;
- Brenchley, Jason M;
- Sékaly, Rafick-Pierre;
- Pillai, Satish K;
- Marson, Alexander;
- Deeks, Steven G;
- McCune, Joseph M;
- Hunt, Peter W
Although many HIV cure strategies seek to expand HIV-specific CD8+ T cells to control the virus, all are likely to fail if cellular exhaustion is not prevented. A loss in stem-like memory properties (i.e., the ability to proliferate and generate secondary effector cells) is a key feature of exhaustion; little is known, however, about how these properties are regulated in human virus-specific CD8+ T cells. We found that virus-specific CD8+ T cells from humans and nonhuman primates naturally controlling HIV/SIV infection express more of the transcription factor TCF-1 than noncontrollers. HIV-specific CD8+ T cell TCF-1 expression correlated with memory marker expression and expansion capacity and declined with antigenic stimulation. CRISPR-Cas9 editing of TCF-1 in human primary T cells demonstrated a direct role in regulating expansion capacity. Collectively, these data suggest that TCF-1 contributes to the regulation of the stem-like memory property of secondary expansion capacity of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells, and they provide a rationale for exploring the enhancement of this pathway in T cell-based therapeutic strategies for HIV.