McMaster Immunology Research Centre, Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research, Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e40138. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040138. Epub 2012 Jul 6.
The majority of infants who breastfeed from their HIV-positive mothers remain uninfected despite constant and repeated exposure to virus over weeks to years. This phenomenon is not fully understood but has been closely linked to innate factors in breast milk (BM). Most recently we have focused on one such innate factor, soluble Toll-like receptor 2 (sTLR2) for its significant contribution as an inhibitor of inflammation triggered by bacterial and viral antigens. We hypothesized that sTLR2 in BM inhibits immune activation/inflammation and HIV-1 infection. sTLR2 protein profiles were analyzed in HIV-uninfected BM and showed dramatic variability in expression concentration and predominant sTLR2 forms between women. sTLR2 immunodepleted BM, versus mock-depleted BM, incubated with Pam(3)CSK(4) lead to significant increases in IL-8 production in a TLR2-dependant fashion in U937, HEK293-TLR2, and Caco-2. Importantly, TLR2-specific polyclonal and monoclonal antibody addition to BM prior to cell-free R5 HIV-1 addition led to significantly (P<0.01, P<0.001, respectively) increased HIV-1 infection in TZM-bl reporter cells. To confirm these findings, sTLR2-depletion in BM led to significantly (P<0.001) increased HIV-1 infection in TZM-bl cells. Notably, immunodepletion does not allow for the complete removal of sTLR2 from BM, thus functional testing shown here may underestimate the total effect elicited by sTLR2 against HIV-1 and synthetic bacterial ligand. This study provides evidence for the first time that sTLR2 in BM may provide a dual protective role for infants breastfeeding from their HIV-infected mothers by; (1) immunomodulating pro-inflammatory responses to bacterial ligands, and (2) directly inhibiting cell-free HIV-1 infection. Thus, sTLR2 in BM may be critical to infant health and prove beneficial in decreasing vertical HIV-1 transmission to infants.
尽管婴儿在数周甚至数年中持续且反复地接触病毒,但大多数母乳喂养的 HIV 阳性母亲的婴儿仍未感染。这种现象尚未完全得到解释,但与母乳中的先天因素密切相关。最近,我们特别关注母乳中的一种先天因素,即可溶性 Toll 样受体 2(sTLR2),因为它作为细菌和病毒抗原引发的炎症的抑制剂具有重要作用。我们假设母乳中的 sTLR2 可以抑制免疫激活/炎症和 HIV-1 感染。我们分析了未感染 HIV 的母乳中的 sTLR2 蛋白谱,结果表明,女性之间的表达浓度和主要 sTLR2 形式存在明显差异。与 mock 耗尽 BM 相比,sTLR2 免疫耗尽 BM 孵育 Pam(3)CSK(4)后,U937、HEK293-TLR2 和 Caco-2 中 TLR2 依赖性 IL-8 产生显著增加。重要的是,在添加无细胞 R5 HIV-1 之前,将 TLR2 特异性多克隆和单克隆抗体添加到 BM 中,可显著(P<0.01、P<0.001)增加 TZM-bl 报告细胞中的 HIV-1 感染。为了证实这些发现,在 TZM-bl 细胞中,sTLR2 耗尽 BM 会显著(P<0.001)增加 HIV-1 感染。值得注意的是,免疫耗尽并不能完全从 BM 中去除 sTLR2,因此这里进行的功能测试可能低估了 sTLR2 对 HIV-1 和合成细菌配体的总作用。这项研究首次提供证据表明,母乳中的 sTLR2 可能通过以下两种方式为母乳喂养的 HIV 感染母亲的婴儿提供双重保护作用:(1)调节对细菌配体的促炎反应;(2)直接抑制无细胞 HIV-1 感染。因此,BM 中的 sTLR2 可能对婴儿的健康至关重要,并有助于降低垂直传播给婴儿的 HIV-1 感染率。