Bristow Cynthia L, Babayeva Mariya A, Modarresi Rozbeh, McArthur Carole P, Kumar Santosh, Awasom Charles, Ayuk Leo, Njinda Annette, Achu Paul, Winston Ronald
Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College.
J Vis Exp. 2012 May 16(63):e3999. doi: 10.3791/3999.
There is an urgent need for affordable CD4 enumeration to monitor HIV disease. CD4 enumeration is out of reach in resource-limited regions due to the time and temperature restrictions, technical sophistication, and cost of reagents, in particular monoclonal antibodies to measure CD4 on blood cells, the only currently acceptable method. A commonly used cost-saving and time-saving laboratory strategy is to calculate, rather than measure certain blood values. For example, LDL levels are calculated using the measured levels of total cholesterol, HDL, and triglycerides. Thus, identification of cell-free correlates that directly regulate the number of CD4(+) T cells could provide an accurate method for calculating CD4 counts due to the physiological relevance of the correlates. The number of stem cells that enter blood and are destined to become circulating CD4(+) T cells is determined by the chemokine CXCL12 and its receptor CXCR4 due to their influence on locomotion. The process of stem cell locomotion into blood is additionally regulated by cell surface human leukocyte elastase (HLE(CS)) and the HLE(CS)-reactive active α(1)proteinase inhibitor (α(1)PI, α(1)antitrypsin, SerpinA1). In HIV-1 disease, α(1)PI is inactivated due to disease processes. In the early asymptomatic categories of HIV-1 disease, active α(1)PI was found to be below normal in 100% of untreated HIV-1 patients (median=12 μM, and to achieve normal levels during the symptomatic categories. This pattern has been attributed to immune inactivation, not to insufficient synthesis, proteolytic inactivation, or oxygenation. We observed that in HIV-1 subjects with >220 CD4 cells/μl, CD4 counts were correlated with serum levels of active α(1)PI (r(2)=0.93, p<0.0001, n=26) and inactive α(1)PI (r(2)=0.91, p<0.0001, n=26). Administration of α(1)PI to HIV-1 infected and uninfected subjects resulted in dramatic increases in CD4 counts suggesting α(1)PI participates in regulating the number of CD4(+) T cells in blood. With stimulation, whole saliva contains sufficient serous exudate (plasma containing proteinaceous material that passes through blood vessel walls into saliva) to allow measurement of active α(1)PI and the correlation of this measurement is evidence that it is an accurate method for calculating CD4 counts. Briefly, sialogogues such as chewing gum or citric acid stimulate the exudation of serum into whole mouth saliva. After stimulating serum exudation, the activity of serum α(1)PI in saliva is measured by its capacity to inhibit elastase activity. Porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) is a readily available inexpensive source of elastase. PPE binds to α(1)PI forming a one-to-one complex that prevents PPE from cleaving its specific substrates, one of which is the colorimetric peptide, succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Ala-p-nitroanilide (SA(3)NA). Incubating saliva with a saturating concentration of PPE for 10 min at room temperature allows the binding of PPE to all the active α(1)PI in saliva. The resulting inhibition of PPE by active α(1)PI can be measured by adding the PPE substrate SA(3)NA. (Figure 1). Although CD4 counts are measured in terms of blood volume (CD4 cells/μl), the concentration of α(1)PI in saliva is related to the concentration of serum in saliva, not to volume of saliva since volume can vary considerably during the day and person to person. However, virtually all the protein in saliva is due to serum content, and the protein content of saliva is measurable. Thus, active α(1)PI in saliva is calculated as a ratio to saliva protein content and is termed the α(1)PI Index. Results presented herein demonstrate that the α(1)PI Index provides an accurate and precise physiologic method for calculating CD4 counts.
迫切需要价格可承受的CD4细胞计数来监测HIV疾病。由于时间和温度限制、技术复杂性以及试剂成本,特别是用于测量血细胞上CD4的单克隆抗体(目前唯一可接受的方法),在资源有限的地区无法进行CD4细胞计数。一种常用的节省成本和时间的实验室策略是计算而不是测量某些血液值。例如,低密度脂蛋白(LDL)水平是使用总胆固醇、高密度脂蛋白(HDL)和甘油三酯的测量水平来计算的。因此,由于这些关联物的生理相关性,鉴定直接调节CD4(+) T细胞数量的无细胞关联物可以提供一种计算CD4计数的准确方法。进入血液并注定成为循环CD4(+) T细胞的干细胞数量由趋化因子CXCL12及其受体CXCR4决定,因为它们对运动有影响。干细胞向血液中移动的过程还受到细胞表面人白细胞弹性蛋白酶(HLE(CS))和HLE(CS)反应性活性α(1)蛋白酶抑制剂(α(1)PI,α(1)抗胰蛋白酶,丝氨酸蛋白酶抑制剂A1)的调节。在HIV-1疾病中,α(1)PI由于疾病过程而失活。在HIV-1疾病的早期无症状阶段,发现100%未经治疗的HIV-1患者中活性α(1)PI低于正常水平(中位数 = 12 μM),并在症状阶段达到正常水平。这种模式归因于免疫失活,而不是合成不足、蛋白水解失活或氧化。我们观察到,在CD4细胞/μl > 220的HIV-1受试者中,CD4计数与活性α(1)PI的血清水平相关(r(2)=0.93,p<0.0001,n = 26)和非活性α(1)PI的血清水平相关(r(2)=0.91,p<0.0001,n = 26)。对HIV-1感染和未感染的受试者施用α(1)PI导致CD4计数显著增加,表明α(1)PI参与调节血液中CD4(+) T细胞的数量。通过刺激,全唾液含有足够的浆液渗出物(含有通过血管壁进入唾液的蛋白质物质的血浆),以允许测量活性α(1)PI,并且这种测量的相关性证明它是一种计算CD4计数的准确方法。简而言之,诸如口香糖或柠檬酸等催涎剂刺激血清渗出到全口唾液中。在刺激血清渗出后,通过其抑制弹性蛋白酶活性的能力来测量唾液中血清α(1)PI的活性。猪胰弹性蛋白酶(PPE)是一种容易获得的廉价弹性蛋白酶来源。PPE与α(1)PI结合形成一对一的复合物,阻止PPE切割其特定底物,其中之一是比色肽琥珀酰-L-丙氨酸-L-丙氨酸-L-丙氨酸-对硝基苯胺(SA(3)NA)。在室温下将唾液与饱和浓度的PPE孵育10分钟,可使PPE与唾液中所有活性α(1)PI结合。活性α(1)PI对PPE的抑制作用可通过添加PPE底物SA(