Author:
Bégaud Evélyne,Chartier Loïc,Marechal Valéry,Ipero Julienne,Léal Josianne,Versmisse Pierre,Breton Guillaume,Fontanet Arnaud,Capoulade-Metay Corinne,Fleury Hervé,Barré-Sinoussi Françoise,Scott-Algara Daniel,Pancino Gianfranco
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Environmentally driven immune activation was suggested to contribute to high rates of HIV-1 infection in Africa. We report here a study of immune activation markers and susceptibility to HIV-1 infection in vitro of forty-five highly exposed uninfected partners (EUs) of HIV-1 infected individuals in Central African Republic, in comparison with forty-four low-risk blood donors (UCs).
Results
Analysis of T lymphocyte subsets and activation markers in whole blood showed that the absolute values and the percentage of HLA-DR+CD4 T cells and of CCR5+CD4 T cells were lower in the EUs than in the UCs (p = 0.0001). Mutations in the CCR5 coding region were not found in either group. Susceptibility to in vitro infection of unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, prior of PHA activation, was decreased in EUs compared to UCs, either using a CXCR4-tropic or a CCR5-tropic HIV-1 strain (p = 0.02 and p = 0.05, respectively). Levels of MIP-1β, but not of MIP-1α or RANTES, in the supernatants of PHA-activated PBMC, were higher in the EUs than in the UCs (p = 0.007).
Conclusion
We found low levels of CD4 T cell activation and reduced PBMC susceptibility to HIV-1 infection in Central African EUs, indicating that both may contribute to the resistance to HIV-1 infection.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Virology
Cited by
89 articles.
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