Affiliation:
1. Department of Public Health and Cellular Biology, Chair of Infectious Diseases
2. Department of Biology, University of Rome ‘Tor Vergata’
3. First Division L. Spallanzani Hospital, Rome, Italy
Abstract
SUMMARY
The present study analyses the ability of HIV-1 to modulate IL-10 production in cells of monocyte-macrophage lineage cultured in the presence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). Both monocytes and macrophages spontaneously produced low amount of IL-10. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced a strong IL-10 response in fresh monocytes and in M-CSF-treated macrophages. In contrast, macrophages cultured in the absence of M-CSF exhibited a marked decrease in their susceptibility to LPS stimulation. M-CSF increased the IL-10 response of macrophages to LPS by enhancing both the expression of membrane-bound CD14, the protein that serves as LPS receptor, and the sensibility of CD14-expressing cells to LPS stimulation. Neither spontaneous nor LPS-induced expression of IL-10 was modulated in monocytes and macrophages by infection with eight monocytotropic strains, as demonstrated by ELISA and cytofluorimetric analysis. In contrast, all the HIV-1 strains primed macrophages for an increased IL-6 response to LPS stimulation. To determine whether IL-10 production was associated with in vivo infection, monocytes from AIDS individuals were analysed for IL-10 production. We found that neither spontaneous nor LPS-induced IL-10 production were different between healthy controls and HIV-infected patients. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that HIV-1 infection of monocytes-macrophages does not play a significant role in the regulation of IL-10 in infected patients. This study also emphasizes the role of M-CSF activation in the regulation of the cytokine response in macrophages.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy