Sankaran Sumathi, Guadalupe Moraima, Reay Elizabeth, George Michael D, Flamm Jason, Prindiville Thomas, Dandekar Satya
Department of Medical Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA 96185, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Jul 12;102(28):9860-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0503463102. Epub 2005 Jun 24.
Limited information is available on the molecular mechanisms by which long-term HIV-1-infected nonprogressors suppress HIV-1 infection and maintain immune functions. The intestinal mucosal immune system is an early target for HIV-1 infection and severe CD4+ T cell depletion. We evaluated mucosal T lymphocyte subsets, virus-specific cellular responses, gene expression profiles, and viral loads in intestinal mucosal biopsies of long-term nonprogressor (LTNP) patients as compared to chronically HIV-1-infected patients with high viral loads (HVLs) and CD4+ T cell loss, as well as HIV-seronegative healthy individuals. This study aims to identify the mucosal correlates of HIV disease progression and to determine the molecular changes associated with immune and intestinal dysfunction. LTNP patients had undetectable viral loads, normal CD4+ T cell levels, and virus-specific cellular responses in peripheral blood and mucosal compartments. Microarray analysis revealed a significant increase in gene expression regulating immune activation, cell trafficking, and inflammatory response in intestinal mucosa of HVL patients as compared to LTNP patients. Genes associated with cell cycle regulation, lipid metabolism, and epithelial cell barrier and digestive functions were down-regulated in both HVL and LTNP patients. This may adversely influence nutrient adsorption and digestive functions, with the potential to impact the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy. We demonstrate that the maintenance of mucosal T cells, virus-specific responses, and distinct gene expression profiles correlate with clinical outcome in LTNP patients. However, the intestinal mucosal immune system remains an important target of HIV-1 infection in LTNP, and these effects may ultimately contribute toward disease progression.
关于长期感染HIV-1的非进展者抑制HIV-1感染并维持免疫功能的分子机制,目前所知信息有限。肠道黏膜免疫系统是HIV-1感染的早期靶点,会导致严重的CD4+T细胞耗竭。我们评估了长期非进展者(LTNP)患者肠道黏膜活检中的黏膜T淋巴细胞亚群、病毒特异性细胞反应、基因表达谱和病毒载量,并与病毒载量高(HVL)且CD4+T细胞减少的慢性HIV-1感染患者以及HIV血清阴性的健康个体进行了比较。本研究旨在确定HIV疾病进展的黏膜相关因素,并确定与免疫和肠道功能障碍相关的分子变化。LTNP患者外周血和黏膜区的病毒载量无法检测到,CD4+T细胞水平正常,且存在病毒特异性细胞反应。微阵列分析显示,与LTNP患者相比,HVL患者肠道黏膜中调节免疫激活、细胞转运和炎症反应的基因表达显著增加。在HVL患者和LTNP患者中,与细胞周期调控、脂质代谢以及上皮细胞屏障和消化功能相关的基因均下调。这可能会对营养物质吸收和消化功能产生不利影响,进而可能影响抗逆转录病毒疗法的疗效。我们证明,黏膜T细胞的维持、病毒特异性反应以及独特的基因表达谱与LTNP患者的临床结局相关。然而,肠道黏膜免疫系统在LTNP患者中仍然是HIV-1感染的重要靶点,这些影响最终可能导致疾病进展。