[HTML][HTML] Immune activation at sites of HIV/TB co-infection contributes to the pathogenesis of HIV-1 disease

Q Meng, I Sayin, DH Canaday, H Mayanja-Kizza… - PLoS …, 2016 - journals.plos.org
Q Meng, I Sayin, DH Canaday, H Mayanja-Kizza, J Baseke, Z Toossi
PLoS One, 2016journals.plos.org
Systemic immune activation is critical to the pathogenesis of HIV-1 disease, and is
accentuated in HIV/TB co-infected patients. The contribution of immune activation at sites of
HIV/TB co-infection to viral activity, CD4 T cell count, and productive HIV-1 infection remain
unclear. In this study, we measured markers of immune activation both in pleural fluid and
plasma, and in T cells in pleural fluid mononuclear cell (PFMC) and peripheral blood
mononuclear cell (PBMC) in HIV/TB co-infected subjects. The relationship between soluble …
Systemic immune activation is critical to the pathogenesis of HIV-1 disease, and is accentuated in HIV/TB co-infected patients. The contribution of immune activation at sites of HIV/TB co-infection to viral activity, CD4 T cell count, and productive HIV-1 infection remain unclear. In this study, we measured markers of immune activation both in pleural fluid and plasma, and in T cells in pleural fluid mononuclear cell (PFMC) and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) in HIV/TB co-infected subjects. The relationship between soluble and T cell activation markers with viral load in pleural fluid and blood CD4 T cell count were assessed. The T cell phenotype and activation status of HIV-1 p24 + T cells in PFMC and PBMC from HIV/TB patients were determined. We found that T cell and macrophage-specific and non-specific soluble markers of immune activation, sCD27, sCD163, IL1Ra, and sCD14, were higher in pleural fluid as compared to plasma from HIV/TB co-infected subjects, and higher as compared to pleural fluid from TB mono-infected subjects. Intestinal fatty acid-binding protein, a marker of intestinal tract damage, in plasma from HIV/TB co-infected patients was not different than that in HIV+ subjects. Expression of HLADR and CD38 double positive (HLADR/CD38) on CD4 T cells, and CD69+ on CD8 T cells correlated with pleural fluid viral load, and inversely with blood CD4 T cell count. Higher expression of HLADR/CD38 and CCR5 on CD4 T cells, and HLADR/CD38 and CD69 on CD8 T cells in PFMC were limited to effector memory populations. HIV-1 p24+ CD8 negative (includes CD4 + and double negative T cells) effector memory T cells in PFMC had higher expression of HLADR/CD38, Ki67, and CCR5 compared to HIV-1 p24- CD8 negative PFMC. Cumulatively, these data indicate that sites of HIV/TB co-infection are the source of intense immune activation.
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