Alcohol Consumption Modifies Susceptibility to HIV-1 Entry in Cervical Mucosa-Derived CD4+ T cells of Women Resident in a Fishing Community of Lake Victoria, Uganda

Author:

Bagaya Bernard Ssentalo1,Driciru Emmanuella1,Fahad Muwanda1,Nantongo Mary1,Namuleme Marion2,Kitandwe Paul Kato2,Ssekayita Enoch Muyanja2,Galiwango Ronald3,Mirembe Violet2,Muwenda Barbarah Kawoozo2,Muwanga Moses4,Kayongo Alex1,Lutwama Fredrick1

Affiliation:

1. Makerere University

2. UVRI-IAVI-HIV Vaccine Program

3. Rakai Health Sciences Program

4. Entebbe General Referral Hospital

Abstract

AbstractBackground:A significant overlap exists in the burden of Alcohol Use Disorders (AUDs) and the HIV epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa. Over 60% of HIV infections occur in women, mostly through the cervical mucosa. Absorption and systemic circulation of alcohol induces global physiological and immune effects, including at the genital mucosa. Alcohol alters expression of cell surface receptors, mucosal barrier permeability, inflammatory responses, and lymphocyte trafficking and homing. However, a substantial knowledge gap exists on whether these cellular and or immunological effects of alcohol modify the consumers’ CD4+ T cell susceptibility to HIV-1 entry at the cervical mucosa. HIV seronegative women, aged 18-49 years were recruited from Kasenyi and Kigungu fish landing sites of Lake Victoria. They were categorized as Alcohol Consumers (n=27) or non-Alcohol Consumers (n=26) based on the World Health Organization Alcohol-Use-Disorder-Test (WHO-AUDIT) at a cut-off score of >=8/40 and <8/40, respectively. Cytobrush-collected Cervical Mononuclear Cells [CMCs] and Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells [PBMCs] from heparinized whole-blood were surface stained for CD4+ T cell immunophenotyping. To measure susceptibility to HIV entry, CMCs and PBMCs were co-cultured overnight with equal amount of GFP-tagged HIV-1 pseudo-virus particles. Both immunophenotyping and HIV entry were measured on a BD LSR II flow cytometer.Results:There was no significant difference in the frequency of CD4+ T cells in blood (p=0.451) or mucosa (p=0.838) compartments across study groups. However, we observed a combined four-fold higher HIV entry (p=0.0001) into cervical versus blood-derived CD4+ T cells regardless of alcohol consumption status. More so, cervical-derived CD4+ T cells of alcohol-consumers showed a two-fold increase in susceptibility to HIV entry (P=0.0185) compared to the non-alcohol consumer group. Double positive α4β7+CD4+T cells of alcohol consumers exhibited a higher HIV entry compared to those from alcohol non-consumers(p=0.0069).Conclusion:This study demonstrates that cervical CD4+ T cells are more susceptible to HIV entry than those from blood. Also, cervical CD4+ T cells of alcohol consumers are more susceptible than those of non- consumers. Differences in frequencies of α4β7+ CD4+ T between alcohol consumers and non-consumers’ cells may account for the increased susceptibility to HIV entry.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference35 articles.

1. (UPHIA), B.H.I.A. UP. UGANDA POPULATION-BASED HIV IMPACT ASSESSMENT. Summary Sheet, 2017.

2. Concentrated HIV subepidemics in generalized epidemic settings;Tanser F;Curr Opin HIV AIDS,2014

3. Kwena ZA. HIV in Fishing Communities: Prevalence, Incidence, Risk Factors, and Interventions. Conference on retroviruses and opportunistic infections, 2020(171).

4. Anthony Kapesa NB, Elias C, Nyanza, Martha F, Mushi O Jahanpour and, Ngallaba SE. Prevalence of HIV infection and uptake of HIV/AIDS services among fisherfolk in landing Islands of Lake Victoria, north western Tanzania. BMC Health Services Research, 2018. 18(980): p. 1–9.

5. Risk Denial and Socio-Economic Factors Related to High HIV Transmission in a Fishing Community in Rakai, Uganda: A Qualitative Study;Muhamadi Lubega NN;PLoS ONE,2015

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