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肠道检查:了解胃肠道微生物组与发育中免疫系统的相互作用,以期实现儿科 HIV 缓解。

A gut check: understanding the interplay of the gastrointestinal microbiome and the developing immune system towards the goal of pediatric HIV remission.

机构信息

Department of Pediatrics, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, 10021, USA.

Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.

出版信息

Retrovirology. 2024 Oct 18;21(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s12977-024-00648-9.

Abstract

Despite the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in reducing the global incidence of vertical HIV transmissions, more than 120,000 children are still infected with the virus each year. Since ART cannot clear the HIV reservoir that is established soon after infection, children living with HIV (CLWH) are forced to rely on therapy for their lives and suffer from long-term drug-related complications. Pediatric HIV infection, like adult infection, is associated with gut microbial dysbiosis, loss of gut epithelial integrity, bacterial translocation, CD4 + T cell depletion, systemic immune activation, and viral reservoir establishment. However, unlike in adults, HIV that is vertically acquired by infants interacts with a gut microbiome that is continuously evolving while concomitantly shaping the infant's immune ontogeny. Therefore, to determine whether there may be interventions that target the HIV reservoir through microbiome-directed approaches, understanding the complex tripartite interactions between the transmitted HIV, the maturing gut microbiome, and the developing immune system during early life is crucial. Importantly, early life is the time when the gut microbiome of an individual is highly dynamic, and this temporal development of the gut microbiome plays a crucial role in educating the maturing immune system of a child. Therefore, manipulation of the gut microbiome of CLWH to a phenotype that can reduce HIV persistence by fostering an antiviral immune system might be an opportune strategy to achieve ART-free viral suppression in CLWH. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge on the vertical transmission of HIV, the developing gut microbiome of CLWH, and the immune landscape of pediatric elite controllers, and explores the prospect of employing microbial modulation as a potential therapeutic approach to achieve ART-free viral suppression in the pediatric population.

摘要

尽管抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)在降低全球垂直传播 HIV 的发生率方面具有疗效,但每年仍有超过 12 万名儿童感染该病毒。由于 ART 无法清除感染后很快建立的 HIV 储存库,因此 HIV 儿童感染者(CLWH)不得不依靠治疗来维持生命,并长期遭受与药物相关的并发症。与成人感染一样,儿科 HIV 感染与肠道微生物失调、肠道上皮完整性丧失、细菌易位、CD4+T 细胞耗竭、全身免疫激活和病毒储存库建立有关。然而,与成人不同的是,婴儿通过垂直途径获得的 HIV 会与不断发育的肠道微生物组相互作用,同时塑造婴儿的免疫发生。因此,为了确定是否可以通过微生物组定向方法针对 HIV 储存库进行干预,了解在生命早期传播的 HIV、成熟的肠道微生物组和发育中的免疫系统之间复杂的三方相互作用至关重要。重要的是,生命早期是个体肠道微生物组高度动态的时期,肠道微生物组的这种时间发育在教育儿童成熟免疫系统方面起着关键作用。因此,操纵 CLWH 的肠道微生物组使其表现型能够通过促进抗病毒免疫系统来减少 HIV 的持续存在,这可能是实现 CLWH 无 ART 病毒抑制的一个恰当策略。本综述总结了 HIV 垂直传播、CLWH 不断发育的肠道微生物组以及儿科精英控制器免疫景观的现有知识状况,并探讨了微生物调节作为实现儿科人群无 ART 病毒抑制的潜在治疗方法的前景。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c7ea/11490017/a3dc4bc93552/12977_2024_648_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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