Li Qingsheng, Estes Jacob D, Schlievert Patrick M, Duan Lijie, Brosnahan Amanda J, Southern Peter J, Reilly Cavan S, Peterson Marnie L, Schultz-Darken Nancy, Brunner Kevin G, Nephew Karla R, Pambuccian Stefan, Lifson Jeffrey D, Carlis John V, Haase Ashley T
Department of Microbiology, Medical School, University of Minnesota, MMC 196, 420 Delaware Street S.E., Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA.
Nature. 2009 Apr 23;458(7241):1034-8. doi: 10.1038/nature07831. Epub 2009 Mar 4.
Although there has been great progress in treating human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) infection, preventing transmission has thus far proven an elusive goal. Indeed, recent trials of a candidate vaccine and microbicide have been disappointing, both for want of efficacy and concerns about increased rates of transmission. Nonetheless, studies of vaginal transmission in the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-rhesus macaque (Macacca mulatta) model point to opportunities at the earliest stages of infection in which a vaccine or microbicide might be protective, by limiting the expansion of infected founder populations at the portal of entry. Here we show in this SIV-macaque model, that an outside-in endocervical mucosal signalling system, involving MIP-3alpha (also known as CCL20), plasmacytoid dendritic cells and CCR5(+ )cell-attracting chemokines produced by these cells, in combination with the innate immune and inflammatory responses to infection in both cervix and vagina, recruits CD4(+) T cells to fuel this obligate expansion. We then show that glycerol monolaurate-a widely used antimicrobial compound with inhibitory activity against the production of MIP-3alpha and other proinflammatory cytokines-can inhibit mucosal signalling and the innate and inflammatory response to HIV-1 and SIV in vitro, and in vivo it can protect rhesus macaques from acute infection despite repeated intra-vaginal exposure to high doses of SIV. This new approach, plausibly linked to interfering with innate host responses that recruit the target cells necessary to establish systemic infection, opens a promising new avenue for the development of effective interventions to block HIV-1 mucosal transmission.
尽管在治疗人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)感染方面已取得巨大进展,但迄今为止,预防传播仍是一个难以实现的目标。事实上,最近对一种候选疫苗和一种杀微生物剂的试验令人失望,原因既有疗效欠佳,也有对传播率上升的担忧。尽管如此,在猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)-恒河猴(猕猴)模型中进行的阴道传播研究指出,在感染的最早阶段存在一些机会,通过限制感染起始群体在进入门户处的扩增,疫苗或杀微生物剂可能具有保护作用。在此,我们在这个SIV-猕猴模型中表明,一种由外向内的宫颈黏膜信号系统,涉及巨噬细胞炎性蛋白-3α(也称为CCL20)、浆细胞样树突状细胞以及这些细胞产生的吸引CCR5(+)细胞的趋化因子,与宫颈和阴道中对感染的固有免疫和炎症反应相结合,招募CD4(+) T细胞以推动这种必然的扩增。然后我们表明,月桂酸单甘油酯——一种广泛使用的具有抑制巨噬细胞炎性蛋白-3α和其他促炎细胞因子产生活性的抗菌化合物——在体外能够抑制黏膜信号传导以及对HIV-1和SIV的固有免疫和炎症反应,在体内它能够保护恒河猴免受急性感染,尽管其反复经阴道暴露于高剂量的SIV。这种新方法可能与干扰招募建立全身感染所需靶细胞的固有宿主反应有关,为开发阻断HIV-1黏膜传播的有效干预措施开辟了一条有前景的新途径。