Jaumdally Shameem Z, Picton Anabela, Tiemessen Caroline T, Paximadis Maria, Jaspan Heather B, Gamieldien Hoyam, Masson Lindi, Coetzee David, Williamson Anna-Lise, Little Francesca, Gumbi Pamela P, Passmore Jo-Ann S
Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
NRF-DST Centre of Excellence in HIV Prevention, CAPRISA, Durban, South Africa.
Immunology. 2017 Aug;151(4):464-473. doi: 10.1111/imm.12743. Epub 2017 May 24.
Several host factors have been implicated in resistance to HIV infection in individuals who remain HIV-seronegative despite exposure. In a cohort of HIV-serodiscordant heterosexual couples, we investigated interactions between systemic inflammation and T-cell activation in resistance to HIV infection. Males and females in stable long-term relationships with either HIV-infected or uninfected partners were recruited, blood T-cell activation (CD38, HLA-DR, CCR5 and Ki67) and plasma cytokine concentrations were evaluated. The HIV-negative exposed individuals had significantly lower frequencies of CCR5 CD4 and CD8 T cells than unexposed individuals. Mean fluorescence intensity of CCR5 expression on CD4 T cells was significantly lower in HIV-negative exposed than unexposed individuals. Protective CCR5 haplotypes (HHA/HHF2, HHF2/HHF2, HHC/HHF2, HHA/HHA, HHA/HHC and HHA/HHD) tended to be over-represented in exposed compared with unexposed individuals (38% versus 28%, P = 0·58) whereas deleterious genotypes (HHC/HHD, HHC/HHE, HHD/HHE, HHD/HHD and HHE/HHE) were under-represented (26% versus 44%; P = 0·16). Plasma concentrations of interleukin-2 (P = 0·02), interferon-γ (P = 0·05) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (P = 0·006) were lower in exposed compared with unexposed individuals. Activation marker expression and systemic cytokine concentrations were not influenced by gender. We conclude that the dominant signature of resistance to HIV infection in this cohort of exposed but uninfected individuals was lower T-cell CCR5 expression and plasma cytokine concentrations.
尽管有接触史,但仍保持HIV血清阴性的个体对HIV感染具有抗性,这涉及多种宿主因素。在一组HIV血清学不一致的异性恋伴侣中,我们研究了全身炎症与T细胞活化在抵抗HIV感染中的相互作用。招募了与HIV感染或未感染伴侣保持稳定长期关系的男性和女性,评估了血液T细胞活化(CD38、HLA-DR、CCR5和Ki67)和血浆细胞因子浓度。与未接触者相比,HIV阴性接触者的CCR5 CD4和CD8 T细胞频率显著降低。HIV阴性接触者CD4 T细胞上CCR5表达的平均荧光强度显著低于未接触者。与未接触者相比,保护性CCR5单倍型(HHA/HHF2、HHF2/HHF2、HHC/HHF2、HHA/HHA、HHA/HHC和HHA/HHD)在接触者中往往比例过高(38%对28%,P = 0·58),而有害基因型(HHC/HHD、HHC/HHE、HHD/HHE、HHD/HHD和HHE/HHE)比例过低(26%对44%;P = 0·16)。与未接触者相比,接触者的血浆白细胞介素-2浓度(P = 0·02)、干扰素-γ浓度(P = 0·05)和粒细胞巨噬细胞集落刺激因子浓度(P = 0·006)较低。活化标志物表达和全身细胞因子浓度不受性别影响。我们得出结论,在这组有接触但未感染的个体中,抵抗HIV感染的主要特征是T细胞CCR5表达和血浆细胞因子浓度较低。