Publication | Open Access
Immune Activation in the Female Genital Tract During HIV Infection Predicts Mucosal CD4 Depletion and HIV Shedding
50
Citations
17
References
2011
Year
Immune ActivationImmunologyCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmune SystemSocial SciencesCervical T CellsHuman RetrovirusFemale Genital TractSexual And Reproductive HealthPrimary ImmunodeficiencyHiv SheddingAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityChronic Viral InfectionHivAids PathogenesisSexual HealthHiv InfectionAntiviral ResponseCellular Immune ResponsePlasma Viral LoadMedicineViral Immunity
Plasma viral load predicts genital tract human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) shedding in HIV-infected women. We investigated whether local mucosal T-cell activation (HLA-DR, CD38, CCR5, and Ki67) contributed to HIV shedding in the genital tracts of HIV-infected women. We showed that cervical cytobrush-derived T cells expressed higher frequencies of T-cell activation markers (CD38+ and HLA-DR+) than blood-derived T cells. Expression was significantly higher in HIV-infected women than in uninfected women. We found that the frequency of activated proliferating cervical T cells (Ki67+; Ki67+CCR5+) broadly predicted HIV shedding in the genital tract in HIV-infected women, independently of plasma viral loads. Furthermore, activated cervical T cells (HLA-DR+CD38+ and HLA-DR+CCR5+) and local HIV shedding were independently associated with CD4 depletion in the genital tract. These data suggest that the presence of high frequencies of activated T cells in the female genital mucosa during HIV infection facilitates both local HIV shedding and CD4 T-cell depletion.
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