6 research outputs found
Low CD4+ T Cell Counts among African HIV-1 Infected Subjects with Group B KIR Haplotypes in the Absence of Specific Inhibitory KIR Ligands
Natural killer (NK) cells are regulated by interactions between polymorphic
killer immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR) and human leukocyte antigens (HLA).
Genotypic combinations of KIR3DS1/L1 and HLA
Bw4-80I were previously shown to influence HIV-1 disease
progression, however other KIR genes have not been well
studied. In this study, we analyzed the influence of all activating and
inhibitory KIR, in association with the known HLA inhibitory KIR ligands, on
markers of disease progression in a West African population of
therapy-naïve HIV-1 infected subjects. We observed a significant
association between carriage of a group B KIR haplotype and
lower CD4+ T cell counts, with an additional effect for
KIR3DS1 within the frame of this haplotype. In contrast, we
found that individuals carrying genes for the inhibitory KIR ligands
HLA-Bw4 as well as HLA-C1 showed
significantly higher CD4+ T cell counts. These associations were
independent from the viral load and from individual HIV-1 protective HLA
alleles. Our data suggest that group B KIR haplotypes and lack
of specific inhibitory KIR ligand genes, genotypes considered to favor NK cell
activation, are predictive of HIV-1 disease progression
Natural killer cells in perinatally HIV-1-infected children exhibit less degranulation compared to HIV-1-exposed uninfected children and their expression of KIR2DL3, NKG2C, and NKp46 correlates with disease severity
A distinct cytokine and chemokine profile at the genital mucosa is associated with HIV-1 protection among HIV-exposed seronegative commercial sex workers
Healthy Neonates Possess a CD56-Negative NK Cell Population with Reduced Anti-Viral Activity
Association of maternal KIR gene content polymorphisms with reduction in perinatal transmission of HIV-1
Adaptive HIV-Specific B Cell-Derived Humoral Immune Defenses of the Intestinal Mucosa in Children Exposed to HIV via Breast-Feeding
BACKGROUND: We evaluated whether B cell-derived immune defenses of the gastro-intestinal tract are activated to produce HIV-specific antibodies in children continuously exposed to HIV via breast-feeding. METHODS: Couples of HIV-1-infected mothers (n = 14) and their breastfed non HIV-infected (n = 8) and HIV-infected (n = 6) babies, and healthy HIV-negative mothers and breastfed babies (n = 10) as controls, were prospectively included at the Complexe Pédiatrique of Bangui, Central African Republic. Immunoglobulins (IgA, IgG and IgM) and anti-gp160 antibodies from mother’s milk and stools of breastfed children were quantified by ELISA. Immunoaffinity purified anti-gp160 antibodies were characterized functionally regarding their capacity to reduce attachment and/or infection of R5- and X4- tropic HIV-1 strains on human colorectal epithelial HT29 cells line or monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDM). RESULTS: The levels of total IgA and IgG were increased in milk of HIV-infected mothers and stools of HIV-exposed children, indicating the activation of B cell-derived mucosal immunity. Breast milk samples as well as stool samples from HIV-negative and HIV-infected babies exposed to HIV by breast-feeding, contained high levels of HIV-specific antibodies, mainly IgG antibodies, less frequently IgA antibodies, and rarely IgM antibodies. Relative ratios of excretion by reference to lactoferrin calculated for HIV-specific IgA, IgG and IgM in stools of HIV-exposed children were largely superior to 1, indicating active production of HIV-specific antibodies by the intestinal mucosa. Antibodies to gp160 purified from pooled stools of HIV-exposed breastfed children inhibited the attachment of HIV-1NDK on HT29 cells by 63% and on MDM by 77%, and the attachment of HIV-1JRCSF on MDM by 40%; and the infection of MDM by HIV-1JRCSF by 93%. CONCLUSIONS: The intestinal mucosa of children exposed to HIV by breast-feeding produces HIV-specific antibodies harbouring in vitro major functional properties against HIV. These observations lay the conceptual basis for the design of a prophylactic vaccine against HIV in exposed children
