Resumen:
Early antiretroviral treatment (ART) in vertically acquired HIV-1-infection is associated with
a rapid viral suppression, small HIV-1 reservoir, reduced morbimortality and preserved
immune functions. We investigated the miRNA profile from vertically acquired HIV-1-
infected young adults based on ART initiation delay and its association with the immune
system activation. Using a microRNA panel and multiparametric flow cytometry,
miRNome profile obtained from peripheral blood mononuclear cells and its association
with adaptive and innate immune components were studied on vertically HIV-1-infected
young adults who started ART early (EARLY, 0-53 weeks after birth) and later (LATE, 120-
300 weeks). miR-1248 and miR-155-5p, were significantly upregulated in EARLY group
compared with LATE group, while miR-501-3p, miR-548d-5p, miR-18a-3p and miR-296-
5p were significantly downregulated in EARLY treated group of patients. Strong
correlations were obtained between miRNAs levels and soluble biochemical biomarkers
and immunological parameters including CD4 T-cell count and maturation by CD69
expression on CD4 T-cells and activation by HLA-DR on CD16high NK cell subsets for
miR-1248 and miR-155-5p. In this preliminary study, a distinct miRNA signature
discriminates early treated HIV-1-infected young adults. The role of those miRNAs
target genes in the modulation of HIV-1 replication and latency may reveal new host
signaling pathways that could be manipulated in antiviral strategies. Correlations between
miRNAs levels and inflammatory and immunological markers highlight those miRNAs as
potential biomarkers for immune inflammation and activation in HIV-1-infected young
adults who initiated a late ART.