Voigt Robin M, Keshavarzian Ali, Losurdo John, Swanson Garth, Siewe Basile, Forsyth Christopher B, French Audrey L, Demarais Patricia, Engen Phillip, Raeisi Shohreh, Mutlu Ece, Landay Alan L
aDepartment of Internal Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition bDepartment of Pharmacology cDepartment of Physiology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois dDivision of Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands eDepartment of Immunology/Microbiology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, USA fDepartment of Biochemistry, Rush University Medical Center gRuth M. Rothstein CORE Center/Department of Medicine, Stroger Hospital of Cook County, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
AIDS. 2015 Mar 13;29(5):537-46. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000569.
Despite the use of HAART to control HIV, systemic immune activation and inflammation persists with the consequence of developing serious non-AIDS events. The mechanisms that contribute to persistent systemic immune activation have not been well defined. The intestine is the major source of "sterile" inflammation and plays a critical role in immune function; thus, we sought to determine whether intestinal gene expression was altered in virally controlled HIV-infected individuals.
Gene expression was compared in biopsy samples collected from HIV-uninfected and HIV-infected individuals from the ileum, right colon (ascending colon), and left colon (sigmoid). Affymetrix gene arrays were performed on tissues and pathway analyses were conducted. Gene expression was correlated with systemic markers of intestinal barrier dysfunction and inflammation and intestinal microbiota composition.
Genes involved in cellular immune response, cytokine signaling, pathogen-influenced signaling, humoral immune response, apoptosis, intracellular and second messenger signaling, cancer, organismal growth and development, and proliferation and development were upregulated in the intestine of HIV-infected individuals with differences observed in the ileum, right, and left colon. Gene expression in the ileum primarily correlated with systemic markers of inflammation (e.g., IL7R, IL2, and TLR2 with serum TNF) whereas expression in the colon correlated with the microbiota community (e.g., IFNG, IL1B, and CD3G with Bacteroides).
These data demonstrate persistent, proinflammatory changes in the intestinal mucosa of virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals. These changes in intestinal gene expression may be the consequence of or contribute to barrier dysfunction and intestinal dysbiosis observed in HIV.
尽管使用高效抗逆转录病毒疗法(HAART)来控制HIV,但全身免疫激活和炎症仍然存在,其结果是引发严重的非艾滋病相关事件。导致持续全身免疫激活的机制尚未完全明确。肠道是“无菌”炎症的主要来源,在免疫功能中起关键作用;因此,我们试图确定在病毒得到控制的HIV感染者中肠道基因表达是否发生改变。
比较从回肠、右结肠(升结肠)和左结肠(乙状结肠)采集的HIV未感染个体和HIV感染个体活检样本中的基因表达。对组织进行Affymetrix基因芯片检测并进行通路分析。基因表达与肠道屏障功能障碍和炎症的全身标志物以及肠道微生物群组成相关联。
参与细胞免疫反应、细胞因子信号传导、病原体影响的信号传导、体液免疫反应、细胞凋亡、细胞内和第二信使信号传导、癌症、机体生长发育以及增殖和发育的基因在HIV感染个体的肠道中上调,在回肠、右结肠和左结肠中观察到差异。回肠中的基因表达主要与炎症的全身标志物相关(例如,IL7R、IL2和TLR2与血清TNF相关),而结肠中的表达与微生物群落相关(例如,IFNG、IL1B和CD3G与拟杆菌属相关)。
这些数据表明,在病毒得到抑制的HIV感染者的肠道黏膜中存在持续的促炎变化。肠道基因表达的这些变化可能是HIV中观察到的屏障功能障碍和肠道生态失调的结果或促成因素。