Fidel P L
Department of Oral and Craniofacial Biology, Center of Excellence in Oral and Craniofacial Biology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Dentistry, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Adv Dent Res. 2011 Apr;23(1):45-9. doi: 10.1177/0022034511399284.
Oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC), caused primarily by Candida albicans, is the most common oral infection in HIV(+) persons. Although Th1-type CD4(+) T cells are the predominant host defense mechanism against OPC, CD8(+) T cells and epithelial cells become important when blood CD4(+) T cells are reduced below a protective threshold during progression to AIDS. In an early cross-sectional study, OPC(+) tissue biopsied from HIV(+) persons had an accumulation of activated memory CD8(+) T cells at the oral epithelial-lamina propria interface, with reduced expression of the adhesion molecule E-cadherin, suggesting a protective role for CD8(+) T cells but a dysfunction in the mucosal migration of the cells. In a subsequent 1-year longitudinal study, OPC(-) patients with high oral Candida colonization (indicative of a preclinical OPC condition), had higher numbers of CD8(+) T cells distributed throughout the tissue, with normal E-cadherin expression. In OPC(+) patients, where lack of CD8(+) T cell migration was associated with reduced E-cadherin, subsequent evaluations following successful treatment of infection revealed normal E-cadherin expression and cellular distribution. Regarding epithelial cell responses, intact oral epithelial cells exhibit fungistatic activity via an acid-labile protein moiety. A proteomic analysis revealed that annexin A1 is a strong candidate for the effector moiety. The current hypothesis is that under reduced CD4(+) T cells, HIV(+) persons protected from OPC have CD8(+) T cells that migrate to the site of a preclinical infection under normal expression of E-cadherin, whereas those with OPC have a transient reduction in E-cadherin that prohibits CD8(+) T cells from migrating for effector function. Oral epithelial cells concomitantly function through annexin A1 to keep Candida in a commensal state but can easily be overwhelmed, thereby contributing to susceptibility to OPC.
口腔念珠菌病(OPC)主要由白色念珠菌引起,是HIV阳性者最常见的口腔感染。虽然Th1型CD4 + T细胞是抵御OPC的主要宿主防御机制,但在进展为艾滋病期间,当血液中CD4 + T细胞减少到保护阈值以下时,CD8 + T细胞和上皮细胞就变得很重要。在一项早期横断面研究中,从HIV阳性者活检的OPC(+)组织在口腔上皮-固有层界面有活化记忆CD8 + T细胞的积聚,黏附分子E-钙黏蛋白的表达降低,提示CD8 + T细胞具有保护作用,但这些细胞的黏膜迁移存在功能障碍。在随后的一项为期1年的纵向研究中,口腔念珠菌高定植(提示临床前OPC状态)的OPC(-)患者,整个组织中分布的CD8 + T细胞数量较多,E-钙黏蛋白表达正常。在OPC(+)患者中,CD8 + T细胞迁移缺乏与E-钙黏蛋白减少有关,感染成功治疗后的后续评估显示E-钙黏蛋白表达和细胞分布正常。关于上皮细胞反应,完整的口腔上皮细胞通过一种酸不稳定蛋白部分表现出抑菌活性。蛋白质组学分析表明,膜联蛋白A1是效应部分的有力候选者。目前的假设是,在CD4 + T细胞减少的情况下,免受OPC感染的HIV阳性者有CD8 + T细胞在E-钙黏蛋白正常表达的情况下迁移到临床前感染部位,而患有OPC的人E-钙黏蛋白会短暂减少,从而阻止CD8 + T细胞迁移发挥效应功能。口腔上皮细胞同时通过膜联蛋白A1发挥作用,使念珠菌保持共生状态,但很容易被压倒,从而导致对OPC的易感性。