Challacombe S J, Fidel P L, Tugizov S, Tao L, Wahl S M
Department of Oral Medicine, Kings College London Dental Institute, London, UK.
Adv Dent Res. 2011 Apr;23(1):142-51. doi: 10.1177/0022034511400222.
Most HIV infections are transmitted across mucosal epithelium. An area of fundamental importance is understanding the role of innate and specific mucosal immunity in susceptibility or protection against HIV infection, as well as the effect of HIV infection on mucosal immunity, which leads to increased susceptibility to bacterial, fungal, and viral infections of oral and other mucosae. This workshop attempted to address 5 basic issues-namely, HIV acquisition across mucosal surfaces, innate and adaptive immunity in HIV resistance, antiviral activity of breast milk as a model mucosal fluid, neutralizing immunoglobulin A antibodies against HIV, and progress toward a mucosal vaccine against HIV. The workshop attendants agreed that progress had been made in each area covered, with much recent information. However, these advances revealed how little work had been performed on stratified squamous epithelium compared with columnar epithelium, and the attendants identified several important biological questions that had not been addressed. It is increasingly clear that innate immunity has an important biological role, although basic understanding of the mechanisms of normal homeostasis is still being investigated. Application of the emerging knowledge was lacking with regard to homeostatic mucosal immunity to HIV and its role in changing this homeostasis. With regard to breast milk, a series of studies have demonstrated the differences between transmitters and nontransmitters, although whether these findings could be generalized to other secretions such as saliva was less clear. Important progress toward an oral mucosal HIV vaccine has been made, demonstrating proof of principle for administering vaccine candidates into oral lymphoid tissues to trigger anti-HIV local and systemic immune responses. Similarly, experimental data emphasized the central role of neutralizing antibodies to prevent HIV infection via mucosal routes.
大多数HIV感染是通过黏膜上皮传播的。一个至关重要的领域是了解固有和特异性黏膜免疫在HIV感染易感性或防护中的作用,以及HIV感染对黏膜免疫的影响,这会导致口腔和其他黏膜对细菌、真菌及病毒感染的易感性增加。本次研讨会试图解决5个基本问题,即HIV通过黏膜表面的获得、HIV抗性中的固有免疫和适应性免疫、作为典型黏膜液体的母乳的抗病毒活性、针对HIV的中和免疫球蛋白A抗体,以及抗HIV黏膜疫苗的进展。研讨会与会者一致认为,在涵盖的每个领域都取得了进展,有很多最新信息。然而,这些进展表明,与柱状上皮相比,分层鳞状上皮方面开展的工作极少,与会者还确定了几个尚未解决的重要生物学问题。越来越明显的是,固有免疫具有重要的生物学作用,尽管对正常稳态机制的基本理解仍在研究之中。在HIV稳态黏膜免疫及其在改变这种稳态中的作用方面,缺乏对新出现知识的应用。关于母乳,一系列研究已经证明了传播者和非传播者之间的差异,尽管这些发现是否能推广到唾液等其他分泌物尚不清楚。在口服黏膜HIV疫苗方面已经取得了重要进展,证明了将候选疫苗接种到口腔淋巴组织中以引发抗HIV局部和全身免疫反应的原理。同样,实验数据强调了中和抗体在通过黏膜途径预防HIV感染中的核心作用。