Laboratory of Pathogen Biology, State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, Center for Infection and Immunity, Guangzhou Institutes of Biomedicine and Health, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China.
Graduate School, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Cell Commun Signal. 2022 Jul 1;20(1):101. doi: 10.1186/s12964-022-00910-7.
Coinfection with HIV and Plasmodium parasites is fairly common, but the sequence of infection with these two pathogens and their impact on disease progression are poorly understood.
A Chinese rhesus macaque HIV and Plasmodium coinfection model was established to compare the impact of pre-existing and subsequent malaria on the progression of SIV infection.
We found that a pre-existing malaria caused animals to produce a greater number of CD4CCR5 T cells for SIV replication, resulting in higher viral loads. Conversely, subsequent malaria induced a substantially larger proportion of CD4CD28CD95 central memory T cells and a stronger SIV-specific T cell response, maintained the repertoire diversity of SIV-specific T cell receptors, and generated new SIV-specific T cell clonotypes to trace SIV antigenic variation, resulting in improved survival of SIV-infected animals.
The complex outcomes of this study may have important implications for research on human HIV and malaria coinfection. The infection order of the two pathogens (HIV and malaria parasites) should be emphasized. Video abstract.
HIV 与疟原虫寄生虫的合并感染相当常见,但这两种病原体的感染顺序及其对疾病进展的影响仍不清楚。
建立了中国恒河猴 HIV 和疟原虫合并感染模型,以比较先发生和后发生疟疾对 SIV 感染进展的影响。
我们发现,先前存在的疟疾导致动物产生更多的 CD4CCR5 T 细胞来复制 SIV,从而导致更高的病毒载量。相反,随后的疟疾诱导了更大比例的 CD4CD28CD95 中央记忆 T 细胞和更强的 SIV 特异性 T 细胞反应,维持了 SIV 特异性 T 细胞受体的 repertoire 多样性,并产生了新的 SIV 特异性 T 细胞克隆型来追踪 SIV 抗原的变化,从而提高了 SIV 感染动物的存活率。
本研究复杂的结果可能对人类 HIV 和疟疾合并感染的研究具有重要意义。应强调两种病原体(HIV 和疟原虫)的感染顺序。视频摘要。