Laboratory Branch, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics and.
JCI Insight. 2019 May 16;4(10). doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.126097.
We explored the association between violence victimization and increased risk for acquiring sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in women by measuring cellular immune barrier properties from the female reproductive tract. STI-negative participants reporting repeated prior victimization occurrences through the lifetime trauma and victimization history (LTVH) instrument were more likely to exhibit alterations in barrier homeostasis and the composition of critical immune mediators irrespective of demographic parameters or presence of bacterial vaginosis. By combining cellular data with mixed-effect linear modeling, we uncovered differences in local T cells, MHCII+ antigen-presenting cells, and epithelial cells indicative of altered trafficking behavior, increased immunosuppressive function, and decreased barrier integrity at sites of STI exposure that correlate most strongly with LTVH score. These data evidence a biological link between a history of violence victimization and risk of STI acquisition through immune dysregulation in the female reproductive tract.
我们通过测量女性生殖道的细胞免疫屏障特性,探索了暴力受害与女性获得性传播感染(STI)风险增加之间的关联。通过终生创伤和受害史(LTVH)工具报告过去反复发生的 STI 阴性参与者更有可能表现出屏障动态平衡和关键免疫介质组成的改变,无论人口统计学参数或细菌性阴道病的存在如何。通过将细胞数据与混合效应线性模型相结合,我们发现局部 T 细胞、MHCII+抗原呈递细胞和上皮细胞的差异表明,在与 LTVH 评分相关性最强的 STI 暴露部位,其迁移行为改变、免疫抑制功能增强和屏障完整性降低。这些数据表明,女性生殖道免疫失调与暴力受害史之间存在 STI 获得风险的生物学联系。