261 results on '"Montaner LJ"'
Search Results
102. HCV viraemia associates with NK cell activation and dysfunction in antiretroviral therapy-treated HIV/HCV-co-infected subjects.
- Author
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Papasavvas E, Azzoni L, Yin X, Liu Q, Joseph J, Mackiewicz A, Ross B, Lynn KM, Jacobson JM, Mounzer K, Kostman JR, and Montaner LJ
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- Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cytokines biosynthesis, Cytotoxicity, Immunologic, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Hepacivirus drug effects, Hepatitis C drug therapy, Hepatitis C metabolism, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Killer Cells, Natural metabolism, Leukocytes, Mononuclear drug effects, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, STAT1 Transcription Factor metabolism, Signal Transduction drug effects, Viral Load, Coinfection, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV Infections virology, Hepacivirus immunology, Hepatitis C immunology, Hepatitis C virology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Viremia
- Abstract
The impact of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA levels on immune status in chronically HCV mono-infected when compared to HIV/HCV co-infected on antiretroviral therapy (ART) remains poorly understood. A total of 78 African American subjects HCV viraemic/naïve to HCV treatment (33 HCV genotype 1 mono-infected, 45 ART-treated HIV/HCV genotype 1 co-infected) were studied. Clinical and liver enzyme measurements were performed. Whole blood was analysed for immune subset changes by flow cytometry. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were used for same-day constitutive and in vitro Interferon (IFN)-α-induced signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) phosphorylation, K562 target cell lysis and K562 target cell recognition-mediated IFN-γ production. Statistical analysis was performed using R (2.5.1) or JMP Pro 11. While both groups did not differ in the level of liver enzymes, HIV/HCV had higher T-cell activation/exhaustion, and constitutive STAT-1 phosphorylation compared to HCV. In contrast, CD4
+ FoxP3+ CD25+ frequency, IFN-αR expression on NK cells, as well as constitutive and IFN-α-induced direct cytotoxicity were lower in HIV/HCV. Linear regression models further supported these results. Finally, increase in HCV viral load and CD4+ T-cell count had an opposite effect between the two groups on NK cell activity and T-cell activation, respectively. HCV viral load in ART-treated HIV/HCV co-infection was associated with greater immune activation/exhaustion and NK dysfunction than HCV viral load alone in HCV mono-infection. The more pronounced immune modulation noted in ART-treated HIV-co-infected/untreated HCV viraemic subjects may impact HCV disease progression and/or response to immunotherapy., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2017
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103. BCL6 represses antiviral resistance in follicular T helper cells.
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Amet T, Son YM, Jiang L, Cheon IS, Huang S, Gupta SK, Dent AL, Montaner LJ, Yu Q, and Sun J
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- Animals, Blotting, Western, Cell Line, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation, Flow Cytometry, HIV-1 immunology, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Disease Resistance immunology, HIV Infections immunology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-6 immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer virology
- Abstract
Follicular Th (Tfh) cells are a distinct subset of Th cells that help B cells produce class-switched antibodies. Studies have demonstrated that Tfh cells are highly prone to HIV infection and replication. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are largely unclear. Here, we show that murine and human Tfh cells have diminished constitutive expression of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) inclusive of antiviral resistance factor MX dynamin-like GTPase 2 (MX2) and IFN-induced transmembrane 3 (IFITM3) compared with non-Tfh cells. A lower antiviral resistance in Tfh was consistent with a higher susceptibility to retroviral infections. Mechanistically, we found that BCL6, a master regulator of Tfh cell development, binds to ISG loci and inhibits the expression of MX2 and IFITM3 in Tfh cells. We demonstrate further that inhibition of the BCL6 BR-C, ttk, and bab (BTB) domain function increases the expression of ISGs and suppresses HIV infection and replication in Tfh cells. Our data reveal a regulatory role of BCL6 in inhibiting antiviral resistance factors in Tfh cells, thereby promoting the susceptibility Tfh cells to viral infections. Our results indicate that the modulation of BCL6 function in Tfh cells could be a potential strategy to enhance Tfh cell resistance to retroviral infections and potentially decrease cellular reservoirs of HIV infection., (© Society for Leukocyte Biology.)
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- 2017
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104. Cell-Mediated Immunity to Target the Persistent Human Immunodeficiency Virus Reservoir.
- Author
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Riley JL and Montaner LJ
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- Clinical Trials as Topic, HIV Infections immunology, Humans, HIV immunology, HIV Infections therapy, HIV Infections virology, Immunity, Cellular, Immunotherapy methods
- Abstract
Effective clearance of virally infected cells requires the sequential activity of innate and adaptive immunity effectors. In human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, naturally induced cell-mediated immune responses rarely eradicate infection. However, optimized immune responses could potentially be leveraged in HIV cure efforts if epitope escape and lack of sustained effector memory responses were to be addressed. Here we review leading HIV cure strategies that harness cell-mediated control against HIV in stably suppressed antiretroviral-treated subjects. We focus on strategies that may maximize target recognition and eradication by the sequential activation of a reconstituted immune system, together with delivery of optimal T-cell responses that can eliminate the reservoir and serve as means to maintain control of HIV spread in the absence of antiretroviral therapy (ART). As evidenced by the evolution of ART, we argue that a combination of immune-based strategies will be a superior path to cell-mediated HIV control and eradication. Available data from several human pilot trials already identify target strategies that may maximize antiviral pressure by joining innate and engineered T cell responses toward testing for sustained HIV remission and/or cure., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2017
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105. IFN-α augments natural killer-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity of HIV-1-infected autologous CD4+ T cells regardless of major histocompatibility complex class 1 downregulation.
- Author
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Tomescu C, Tebas P, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Cells, Cultured, Down-Regulation, HIV Antibodies immunology, HIV Infections immunology, Humans, Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes physiology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, HIV Infections pathology, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I biosynthesis, Interferon-alpha metabolism, Killer Cells, Natural immunology
- Abstract
Design: We have previously shown that IFN-α stimulation augments direct natural killer (NK) cell lysis of autologous CD4 primary T cells infected with certain HIV-1 isolates based upon major histocompatibility complex class 1 (MHC-1) downregulation capacity. Here, we investigated if antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) could trigger lysis of HIV-1 isolates that were resistant to direct NK lysis and if IFN-α prestimulation of NK cells could further enhance ADCC., Methods: Using broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against gp120 (VRC01 or PGV04) or plasma from HIV-1-infected patients (ART-suppressed or elite controller) to trigger ADCC, we measured NK cell chromium release cytotoxicity against HIV-1-infected autologous CD4 primary T cells and NK cell CD107a degranulation against gp120-coated CD4 T cells. Total or NK-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells were used as effectors in the presence or absence of IFN-α prestimulation., Results: Plasma from HIV-1-infected patients and monoclonal antibodies against gp120 could trigger NK-dependent ADCC lysis of viral isolates that were resistant to direct NK cell lysis following IFN-α stimulation. In contrast, viral isolates that exhibited potent MHC-I downregulation capacity could be lysed by NK cells through either IFN-α stimulated direct cytotoxicity or through ADCC. When utilized in combination, IFN-α prestimulation significantly augmented ADCC lysis of HIV-1-infected target cells and increased NK cell CD107a degranulation against gp120-coated ADCC targets (P < 0.05, n = 6)., Conclusion: HIV-1 isolates with lower MHC-I downregulation capacity are resistant to direct lysis following IFN-α stimulation but retain sensitivity to ADCC. IFN-α prestimulation can significantly increase NK-mediated clearance of HIV-1-infected target cells by both ADCC and/or direct cytotoxicity depending on MHC downregulation status.
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- 2017
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106. Zinc reduces epithelial barrier compromise induced by human seminal plasma.
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Mullin JM, Diguilio KM, Valenzano MC, Deis R, Thomas S, Zurbach EP, Abdulhaqq S, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Caco-2 Cells, Claudins metabolism, Cytokines metabolism, Epithelium drug effects, Humans, Male, Cell Membrane Permeability drug effects, Epithelium physiology, Semen chemistry, Zinc pharmacology
- Abstract
Human semen has the potential to modulate the epithelial mucosal tissues it contacts, as seminal plasma (SP) is recognized to contain both pro- and anti-barrier components, yet its effects on epithelial barrier function are largely unknown. We addressed the role of human SP when exposed to the basal-lateral epithelial surface, a situation that would occur clinically with prior mechanical or disease-related injury of the human epithelial mucosal cell layers in contact with semen. The action of SP on claudins-2, -4, -5, and -7 expression, as well as on a target epithelium whose basolateral surface has been made accessible to SP, showed upregulation of claudins-4 and -5 in CACO-2 human epithelial cell layers, despite broad variance in SP-induced modulation of transepithelial electrical resistance and mannitol permeability. Upregulation of claudin-2 by SP also exhibited such variance by SP sample. We characterize individual effects on CACO-2 barrier function of nine factors known to be present abundantly in seminal plasma (zinc, EGF, citrate, spermine, fructose, urea, TGF, histone, inflammatory cytokines) to establish that zinc, spermine and fructose had significant potential to raise CACO-2 transepithelial resistance, whereas inflammatory cytokines and EGF decreased this measure of barrier function. The role of zinc as a dominant factor in determining higher levels of transepithelial resistance and lower levels of paracellular leak were confirmed by zinc chelation and exogenous zinc addition. As expected, SP presentation to the basolateral cell surface also caused a very dramatic yet transient elevation of pErk levels. Results suggest that increased zinc content in SP can compete against the barrier-compromising effect of negative modulators in SP when SP gains access to that epithelium's basolateral surface. Prophylactic elevation of zinc in an epithelial cell layer prior to contact by SP may help to protect an epithelial barrier from invasion by SP-containing STD microbial pathogens such as HPV or HIV.
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- 2017
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107. Pilot and Feasibility Trial Evaluating Immuno-Gene Therapy of Malignant Mesothelioma Using Intrapleural Delivery of Adenovirus-IFNα Combined with Chemotherapy.
- Author
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Sterman DH, Alley E, Stevenson JP, Friedberg J, Metzger S, Recio A, Moon EK, Haas AR, Vachani A, Katz SI, Sun J, Heitjan DF, Hwang WT, Litzky L, Yearley JH, Tan KS, Papasavvas E, Kennedy P, Montaner LJ, Cengel KA, Simone CB 2nd, Culligan M, Langer CJ, and Albelda SM
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Combined Modality Therapy, Female, Genetic Vectors administration & dosage, Humans, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Lung Neoplasms mortality, Male, Mesothelioma diagnosis, Mesothelioma mortality, Mesothelioma, Malignant, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Treatment Outcome, Adenoviridae genetics, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Genetic Therapy adverse effects, Genetic Therapy methods, Genetic Vectors genetics, Immunotherapy adverse effects, Immunotherapy methods, Interferon-alpha genetics, Lung Neoplasms genetics, Lung Neoplasms therapy, Mesothelioma genetics, Mesothelioma therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: "In situ vaccination" using immunogene therapy has the ability to induce polyclonal antitumor responses directed by the patient's immune system., Experimental Design: Patients with unresectable malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) received two intrapleural doses of a replication-defective adenoviral vector containing the human IFNα2b gene (Ad.IFN) concomitant with a 14-day course of celecoxib followed by chemotherapy. Primary outcomes were safety, toxicity, and objective response rate; secondary outcomes included progression-free and overall survival. Biocorrelates on blood and tumor were measured., Results: Forty subjects were treated: 18 received first-line pemetrexed-based chemotherapy, 22 received second-line chemotherapy with pemetrexed (n = 7) or gemcitabine (n = 15). Treatment was generally well tolerated. The overall response rate was 25%, and the disease control rate was 88%. Median overall survival (MOS) for all patients with epithelial histology was 21 months versus 7 months for patients with nonepithelial histology. MOS in the first-line cohort was 12.5 months, whereas MOS for the second-line cohort was 21.5 months, with 32% of patients alive at 2 years. No biologic parameters were found to correlate with response, including numbers of activated blood T cells or NK cells, regulatory T cells in blood, peak levels of IFNα in blood or pleural fluid, induction of antitumor antibodies, nor an immune-gene signature in pretreatment biopsies., Conclusions: The combination of intrapleural Ad.IFN, celecoxib, and chemotherapy proved safe in patients with MPM. OS rate was significantly higher than historical controls in the second-line group. Results of this study support proceeding with a multicenter randomized clinical trial of chemo-immunogene therapy versus standard chemotherapy alone. Clin Cancer Res; 22(15); 3791-800. ©2016 AACR., (©2016 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2016
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108. Antiretroviral therapy in HIV-1-infected individuals with CD4 count below 100 cells/mm3 results in differential recovery of monocyte activation.
- Author
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Patro SC, Azzoni L, Joseph J, Fair MG, Sierra-Madero JG, Rassool MS, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers metabolism, CCR5 Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear drug effects, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Leukocytes, Mononuclear virology, Lymphocyte Activation, Macrophages drug effects, Macrophages immunology, Macrophages metabolism, Macrophages virology, Male, Maraviroc, Middle Aged, Monocytes drug effects, Monocytes metabolism, Monocytes virology, Viral Load drug effects, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Cyclohexanes pharmacology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Monocytes immunology, Triazoles pharmacology, Viral Load immunology
- Abstract
Reversal of monocyte and macrophage activation and the relationship to viral suppression and T cell activation are unknown in patients with advanced HIV-1 infection, initiating antiretroviral therapy. This study aimed to determine whether reduction in biomarkers of monocyte and macrophage activation would be reduced in conjunction with viral suppression and resolution of T cell activation. Furthermore, we hypothesized that the addition of CCR5 antagonism (by maraviroc) would mediate greater reduction of monocyte/macrophage activation markers than suppressive antiretroviral therapy alone. In the CCR5 antagonism to decrease the incidence of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome study, antiretroviral therapy-naïve patients received maraviroc or placebo in addition to standard antiretroviral therapy. PBMCs and plasma from 65 patients were assessed during 24 wk of antiretroviral therapy for biomarkers of monocyte and macrophage activation. Markers of monocyte and macrophage activation were reduced significantly by 24 wk, including CD14(++)CD16(+) intermediate monocytes (P < 0.0001), surface CD163 (P = 0.0004), CD169 (P < 0.0001), tetherin (P = 0.0153), and soluble CD163 (P < 0.0001). A change in CD38(+), HLA-DR(+) CD8 T cells was associated with changes in CD169 and tetherin expression. Maraviroc did not affect biomarkers of monocyte/macrophage activation but resulted in greater percentages of CCR5-positive monocytes in PBMC. HIV-1 suppression after 24 wk of antiretroviral therapy, with or without maraviroc, demonstrates robust recovery in monocyte subset activation markers, whereas soluble markers of activation demonstrate minimal decrease, qualitatively differentiating markers of monocyte/macrophage activation in advanced disease., (© Society for Leukocyte Biology.)
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- 2016
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109. HIV-1-negative female sex workers sustain high cervical IFNɛ, low immune activation, and low expression of HIV-1-required host genes.
- Author
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Abdulhaqq SA, Zorrilla C, Kang G, Yin X, Tamayo V, Seaton KE, Joseph J, Garced S, Tomaras GD, Linn KA, Foulkes AS, Azzoni L, VerMilyea M, Coutifaris C, Kossenkov AV, Showe L, Kraiselburd EN, Li Q, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Cervix Uteri pathology, Disease Susceptibility, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Viral, Humans, Immune Tolerance, Interferon Type I metabolism, Interferons genetics, Lymphocyte Activation genetics, Mucous Membrane virology, Semen immunology, Sexual Behavior, Virus Integration genetics, Virus Replication genetics, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes physiology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes physiology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 physiology, Interferons metabolism, Mucous Membrane immunology, Sex Workers
- Abstract
Sex workers practicing in high HIV endemic areas have been extensively targeted to test anti-HIV prophylactic strategies. We hypothesize that in women with high levels of genital exposure to semen changes in cervico-vaginal mucosal and/or systemic immune activation will contribute to a decreased susceptibility to HIV-1 infection. To address this question, we assessed sexual activity and immune activation status (in peripheral blood), as well as cellular infiltrates and gene expression in ectocervical mucosa biopsies in female sex workers (FSWs; n=50), as compared with control women (CG; n=32). FSWs had low-to-absent HIV-1-specific immune responses with significantly lower CD38 expression on circulating CD4(+) or CD8(+) T-cells (both: P<0.001) together with lower cervical gene expression of genes associated with leukocyte homing and chemotaxis. FSWs also had increased levels of interferon-ɛ (IFNɛ) gene and protein expression in the cervical epithelium together with reduced expression of genes associated with HIV-1 integration and replication. A correlative relationship between semen exposure and elevated type-1 IFN expression in FSWs was also established. Overall, our data suggest that long-term condomless sex work can result in multiple changes within the cervico-vaginal compartment that would contribute to sustaining a lower susceptibility for HIV-1 infection in the absence of HIV-specific responses.
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- 2016
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110. Short-term Treatment With Interferon Alfa Diminishes Expression of HIV-1 and Reduces CD4+ T-Cell Activation in Patients Coinfected With HIV and Hepatitis C Virus and Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy.
- Author
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Morón-López S, Gómez-Mora E, Salgado M, Ouchi D, Puertas MC, Urrea V, Navarro J, Jou A, Pérez M, Tural C, Clotet B, Montaner LJ, Blanco J, Crespo M, and Martinez-Picado J
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- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents administration & dosage, Biomarkers, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes classification, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes physiology, Coinfection, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Viral drug effects, HIV Infections complications, Hepacivirus, Humans, Interferon-alpha administration & dosage, Lymphocyte Activation drug effects, Male, Middle Aged, Polyethylene Glycols administration & dosage, Recombinant Proteins administration & dosage, Recombinant Proteins therapeutic use, Ribavirin administration & dosage, Ribavirin therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes drug effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 physiology, Hepatitis C complications, Interferon-alpha therapeutic use, Polyethylene Glycols therapeutic use
- Abstract
Long-term treatment with interferon (IFN) alfa plus ribavirin decreases the proviral human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) DNA level. However, the short-term impact of IFN alfa on persistent HIV and its effects on immune activation after antiretroviral therapy remain unknown. Our study showed that the cell-associated HIV RNA level and CD4(+) T-cell activation decreased in the IFN group (n = 10). No changes were detected in levels of residual plasma viremia, replication-competent reservoirs, proviral DNA, or 2-long-terminal repeat circles, although APOBEC3G, TRIM5α, BST2, and TRIM22 were upregulated in the IFN group. These data suggest that short-term treatment with IFN alfa combined with RBV decreases HIV expression, in part through inhibition of HIV transcription by TRIM22 and decrease in T-cell activation., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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111. High-risk oncogenic HPV genotype infection associates with increased immune activation and T cell exhaustion in ART-suppressed HIV-1-infected women.
- Author
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Papasavvas E, Surrey LF, Glencross DK, Azzoni L, Joseph J, Omar T, Feldman MD, Williamson AL, Siminya M, Swarts A, Yin X, Liu Q, Firnhaber C, and Montaner LJ
- Abstract
Persistence of human papillomavirus (HPV) and cervical disease in the context of HIV co-infection can be influenced by introduction of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and sustained immune activation despite ART. We conducted a cross-sectional study in order to evaluate immune activation/exhaustion in ART-suppressed HIV(+) women with or without high-risk (HR) HPV-related cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). 55 South African women were recruited in three groups: HR (-) (n = 16) and HR (+) (n = 15) HPV with negative cervical histopathology, and HR (+) HPV with CIN grade 1/2/3 (n = 24). Sampling included endocervical brushing (HPV DNA genotyping), Pap smear (cytology), colposcopic punch biopsy (histopathology, histochemical evaluation of immune cells), and peripheral blood (clinical assessment, flow cytometry-based immune subset characterization). Statistics were done using R2.5.1. Irrespective of the presence of CIN, HR (+) HPV women had higher circulating levels of T cells expressing markers of activation/exhaustion (CD38, PD1, CTLA-4, BTLA, CD160), Tregs, and myeloid subsets expressing corresponding ligands (PDL1, PDL2, CD86, CD40, HVEM) than HR (-) HPV women. A decrease in circulating NK cells was associated with CIN grade. CD4(+) T cell count associated negatively with T cell exhaustion and expression of negative regulators on myeloid cells. Women with CIN when compared to HR (-) HPV women, had higher cervical cell density in stroma and epithelium for CD4(+), CD68(+), and CD11c(+) cells, and only in stroma for CD8(+) cells. We conclude that in ART-suppressed HIV-infected women with HPV co-infection the levels of T and myeloid cell activation/exhaustion are associated with the presence of HR HPV genotypes.
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- 2016
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112. Early ART Results in Greater Immune Reconstitution Benefits in HIV-Infected Infants: Working with Data Missingness in a Longitudinal Dataset.
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Azzoni L, Barbour R, Papasavvas E, Glencross DK, Stevens WS, Cotton MF, Violari A, and Montaner LJ
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- Bayes Theorem, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cohort Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Immunity, Innate, Immunologic Memory, Infant, Interleukin-7 metabolism, Longitudinal Studies, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Databases as Topic, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections immunology
- Abstract
Background: Early initiation of anti-retroviral treatment (ART) decreases mortality as compared to deferred treatment, but whether it preserves immune cells from early loss or promotes their recovery remains undefined. Determination of complex immunological endpoints in infants is often marred by missing data due to missed visits and/or inadequate sampling. Specialized methods are required to address missingness and facilitate data analysis., Methods: We characterized the changes in cellular and humoral immune parameters over the first year of life in 66 HIV-infected infants (0-1 year of age) enrolled in the CHER study starting therapy within 12 weeks of birth (n = 42) or upon disease progression (n = 24). A convenience cohort of 23 uninfected infants aged 0-6 months born to mothers with HIV-1 infection was used as controls. Flow cytometry and ELISA were used to evaluate changes in natural killer (NK) cells, plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC), and CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell frequencies. Data missingness was assessed using Little's test. Complete datasets for analysis were created using Multiple Imputation (MI) or Bayesian modeling and multivariate analysis was conducted on the imputed datasets., Results: HIV-1-infected infants had greater frequency of CD4+ T cells with naïve phenotype, as well as higher serum IL-7 levels than HIV exposed/uninfected infants. The elevated data missingness was completely at random, allowing the use of both MI and Bayesian modeling. Both methods indicate that early ART initiation results in higher CD4+ T cell frequency, lower expression of CD95 in CD8+ T cell, and preservation of naïve T cell subsets. In contrast, innate immune effectors appeared to be similar independently of the timing of ART initiation., Conclusions: Early ART initiation in infants with perinatal HIV infection reduces immune activation and preserves an early expansion of naïve T-cells with undiminished innate cell numbers, giving greater immune reconstitution than achieved with deferred ART. Both statistical approaches concurred in this finding.
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- 2015
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113. Lysis of HIV-1-infected autologous CD4+ primary T cells by interferon-alpha-activated NK cells requires NKp46 and NKG2D.
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Tomescu C, Mavilio D, and Montaner LJ
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- Cells, Cultured, Cytotoxicity Tests, Immunologic, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 growth & development, Humans, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cytotoxicity, Immunologic, HIV Infections immunology, Interferon-alpha metabolism, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, NK Cell Lectin-Like Receptor Subfamily K metabolism, Natural Cytotoxicity Triggering Receptor 1 metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: Autologous HIV-1-infected CD4 primary T cells (aHIVCD4) have been shown to be largely resistant to natural killer (NK)-cell-mediated lysis because of viral strategies of immune evasion. We have previously shown that a preactivation of NK cells with plasmacytoid dendritic cells can significantly augment lysis of aHIVCD4 through a mechanism dependent on interferon-alpha (IFN-α)., Design: The goal of the present study is to identify the specific NK-activating receptors involved in NK lysis of aHIVCD4 following IFN-α activation., Methods: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were incubated with aHIVCD4 to induce the secretion of endogenous levels of IFN-α and drive NK activation. We then utilized a standard chromium lysis assay to assess the degree of IFN-α-activated lysis of aHIVCD4 in the presence or absence of masking antibodies to a panel of NK-activating receptors and co-receptors., Results: Direct recognition of HIV-1-infected, but not uninfected, autologous CD4 primary T cells by PBMC induced the secretion IFN-α (median 2280 pg/ml, P < 0.001, n = 9) that, in turn, activated NK cells (P < 0.001, n = 12) and significantly increased their cytolytic potential against aHIVCD4 (P < 0.01, n = 12). The masking of NKp46 (P < 0.01, n = 8) and NKG2D (P < 0.05, n = 8), but not 2B4, NTBA, NKp30 or NKp44, significantly reduced IFN-α-activated lysis of aHIVCD4., Conclusions: Taken together, these results demonstrate that endogenous levels of IFN-α secreted by plasmacytoid dendritic cells induce NK cells to lyse aHIVCD4 via the engagement of NKp46 and NKG2D.
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- 2015
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114. Plasmacytoid dendritic cell and functional HIV Gag p55-specific T cells before treatment interruption can inform set-point plasma HIV viral load after treatment interruption in chronically suppressed HIV-1(+) patients.
- Author
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Papasavvas E, Foulkes A, Yin X, Joseph J, Ross B, Azzoni L, Kostman JR, Mounzer K, Shull J, and Montaner LJ
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- Adult, Aged, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, CD3 Complex immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes drug effects, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cells, Cultured, Dendritic Cells drug effects, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 metabolism, Host-Pathogen Interactions drug effects, Host-Pathogen Interactions immunology, Humans, Interferon-gamma immunology, Lysosomal-Associated Membrane Protein 1 immunology, Middle Aged, Perforin immunology, Retrospective Studies, T-Lymphocytes drug effects, T-Lymphocytes virology, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Viral Load drug effects, Dendritic Cells immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Protein Precursors immunology, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Viral Load immunology
- Abstract
The identification of immune correlates of HIV control is important for the design of immunotherapies that could support cure or antiretroviral therapy (ART) intensification-related strategies. ART interruptions may facilitate this task through exposure of an ART partially reconstituted immune system to endogenous virus. We investigated the relationship between set-point plasma HIV viral load (VL) during an ART interruption and innate/adaptive parameters before or after interruption. Dendritic cell (DC), natural killer (NK) cell and HIV Gag p55-specific T-cell functional responses were measured in paired cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained at the beginning (on ART) and at set-point of an open-ended interruption from 31 ART-suppressed chronically HIV-1(+) patients. Spearman correlation and linear regression modeling were used. Frequencies of plasmacytoid DC (pDC), and HIV Gag p55-specific CD3(+) CD4(-) perforin(+) IFN-γ(+) cells at the beginning of interruption associated negatively with set-point plasma VL. Inclusion of both variables with interaction into a model resulted in the best fit (adjusted R(2) = 0·6874). Frequencies of pDC or HIV Gag p55-specific CD3(+) CD4(-) CSFE(lo) CD107a(+) cells at set-point associated negatively with set-point plasma VL. The dual contribution of pDC and anti-HIV T-cell responses to viral control, supported by our models, suggests that these variables may serve as immune correlates of viral control and could be integrated in cure or ART-intensification strategies., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2015
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115. Correction for Patro et al., Shift in Monocyte Apoptosis with Increasing Viral Load and Change in Apoptosis-Related ISG/Bcl2 Family Gene Expression in Chronically HIV-1-Infected Subjects.
- Author
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Patro SC, Pal S, Bi Y, Lynn K, Mounzer KC, Kostman JR, Davuluri RV, and Montaner LJ
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- 2015
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116. Innate activation of MDC and NK cells in high-risk HIV-1-exposed seronegative IV-drug users who share needles when compared with low-risk nonsharing IV-drug user controls.
- Author
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Tomescu C, Seaton KE, Smith P, Taylor M, Tomaras GD, Metzger DS, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cohort Studies, Female, HIV Antibodies blood, HIV Antigens immunology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Dendritic Cells immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Needle Sharing, Substance Abuse, Intravenous
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have described increased innate immune activation in HIV-1-exposed seronegative intravenous drug users (HESN-IDU), but have not addressed the independent role of injected drugs and/or repeated injections in driving immune activation., Methods: In this study, we investigated innate [natural killer (NK) cells and dendritic cells] and adaptive (HIV-specific antibody and CD8 T cell) immune parameters among a high-risk cohort of needle-sharing HESN-IDU subjects and compared them with low-risk nonsharing IDU subjects (NS-IDU) and non-drug-user controls., Results: We observed that HIV-specific antibody and CD8 T-cell responses were not detected in HESN-IDU subjects, yet innate immune cell activation was found to be significantly increased on NK cells (CD69 and CD107a upregulation) and myeloid dendritic cells (CD40 and CD83 upregulation) when compared with NS-IDU subjects or non-drug-user controls (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05, respectively). HESN-IDU subjects maintained strong NK-cell CD107a degranulation and cytokine (IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and MIP-1 beta) production after target cell incubation suggesting that constitutive innate activation does not induce functional exhaustion of innate cells in HESN-IDU subjects. NK activation in HESN-IDU subjects was independent of drug use patterns but was durable over time and correlated with plasma levels of IP-10 by Luminex analysis (ρ = 0.5073, P = 0.0059, n = 28)., Conclusions: Our results indicate that heightened innate immune cell activation in HESN-IDU subjects is not the result of the IV drugs and repeated injection practice itself, but to repeated exposure to factors intrinsic to sharing needles (ie, exposure to pathogens or heterologous cells among donor blood).
- Published
- 2015
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117. Short communication: Nitazoxanide inhibits HIV viral replication in monocyte-derived macrophages.
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Gekonge B, Bardin MC, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- APOBEC-3G Deaminase, Antigens, CD metabolism, Antiprotozoal Agents pharmacology, CD4 Antigens metabolism, Cells, Cultured, Cytidine Deaminase metabolism, Down-Regulation, Drug Repositioning, GPI-Linked Proteins metabolism, Humans, Nitro Compounds, Proteins metabolism, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism, Up-Regulation, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 physiology, Macrophages virology, Thiazoles pharmacology, Virus Replication drug effects
- Abstract
We document the anti-HIV activity of nitazoxanide (NTZ), the first member of the thiazolide class of antiinfective drugs, originally effective against enteritis caused by Cryptosporidium parvum and Giardia lamblia. NTZ has been administered extensively worldwide, with no severe toxicities associated with its use. Here, we show for the first time that NTZ decreases HIV-1 replication in monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) if present before or during HIV-1 infection. This NTZ effect is associated with downregulation of HIV-1 receptors CD4 and CCR5, and increasing gene expression of host cell anti-HIV resistance factors APOBEC3A/3G and tetherin. As NTZ is already in clinical use for other conditions, this newly described anti-HIV activity in MDM may facilitate innovative intensification strategies against HIV-1 when combined with current antiretroviral drug regimens.
- Published
- 2015
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118. Shift in monocyte apoptosis with increasing viral load and change in apoptosis-related ISG/Bcl2 family gene expression in chronically HIV-1-infected subjects.
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Patro SC, Pal S, Bi Y, Lynn K, Mounzer KC, Kostman JR, Davuluri RV, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monocytes physiology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 biosynthesis, Retinoblastoma Protein biosynthesis, Young Adult, Apoptosis, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 immunology, Monocytes immunology, Viral Load
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Although monocytes and macrophages are targets of HIV-1-mediated immunopathology, the impact of high viremia on activation-induced monocyte apoptosis relative to monocyte and macrophage activation changes remains undetermined. In this study, we determined constitutive and oxidative stress-induced monocyte apoptosis in uninfected and HIV(+) individuals across a spectrum of viral loads (n = 35; range, 2,243 to 1,355,998 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml) and CD4 counts (range, 26 to 801 cells/mm(3)). Both constitutive apoptosis and oxidative stress-induced apoptosis were positively associated with viral load and negatively associated with CD4, with an elevation in apoptosis occurring in patients with more than 40,000 (4.6 log) copies/ml. As expected, expression of Rb1 and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), plasma soluble CD163 (sCD163) concentration, and the proportion of CD14(++) CD16(+) intermediate monocytes were elevated in viremic patients compared to those in uninfected controls. Although CD14(++) CD16(+) frequencies, sCD14, sCD163, and most ISG expression were not directly associated with a change in apoptosis, sCD14 and ISG expression showed an association with increasing viral load. Multivariable analysis of clinical values and monocyte gene expression identified changes in IFI27, IFITM2, Rb1, and Bcl2 expression as determinants of constitutive apoptosis (P = 3.77 × 10(-5); adjusted R(2) = 0.5983), while changes in viral load, IFITM2, Rb1, and Bax expression were determinants of oxidative stress-induced apoptosis (P = 5.59 × 10(-5); adjusted R(2) = 0.5996). Our data demonstrate differential activation states in monocytes between levels of viremia in association with differences in apoptosis that may contribute to greater monocyte turnover with high viremia., Importance: This study characterized differential monocyte activation, apoptosis, and apoptosis-related gene expression in low- versus high-level viremic HIV-1 patients, suggesting a shift in apoptosis regulation that may be associated with disease state. Using single and multivariable analysis of monocyte activation parameters and gene expression, we supported the hypothesis that monocyte apoptosis in HIV disease is a reflection of viremia and activation state with contributions from gene expression changes within the ISG and Bcl2 gene families. Understanding monocyte apoptosis response may inform HIV immunopathogenesis, retention of infected macrophages, and monocyte turnover in low- or high-viral-load states., (Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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119. A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial of a Chemokine Receptor 5 (CCR5) Antagonist to Decrease the Occurrence of Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome in HIV-Infection: The CADIRIS Study.
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Sierra-Madero JG, Ellenberg S, Rassool MS, Tierney A, Belaunzarán-Zamudio PF, López-Martínez A, Piñeirúa-Menéndez A, Montaner LJ, Azzoni L, Benítez CR, Sereti I, Andrade-Villanueva J, Mosqueda-Gómez JL, Rodriguez B, Sanne I, and Lederman MM
- Abstract
Background: Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome (IRIS) is a common complication of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in HIV-infected patients. IRIS is associated with an increased risk of hospitalization and death. We ascertained whether CCR5 blockade using maraviroc reduces the risk of IRIS., Methods: The CADIRIS study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, clinical trial that accrued subjects from five clinical sites in Mexico and one in South Africa between November 2009 and January 2012, and followed them for one year. The primary outcome was occurrence of IRIS by 24 weeks. HIV-infected adults, naïve to ART, with CD4 cells <100/μL, and HIVRNA >1,000 copies/mL were eligible. We screened 362 subjects; 279 met inclusion criteria, 3 refused participation, and 276 were randomized. Participants received maraviroc 600 mg twice daily or placebo added to an ART regimen that included tenofovir, emtricitabine, and efavirenz for 48 weeks., Findings: There were 276 patients randomized (140 received maraviroc and 136 placebo). There was no difference in the time to IRIS events between treatment arms (HR 1·08, 95% CI (0·66, 1·77), log-rank test p =0·743). In total, 64 (23%) patients had IRIS events, 33 (24%) in the maraviroc arm and 31 (23%) in the placebo arm ( p =0·88)., Interpretation: Maraviroc had no significant effect on frequency, time or severity of IRIS events after ART initiation. Including a CCR5 inhibitor in an initial treatment regimen does not confer a meaningful protection from the occurrence of IRIS in persons with advanced HIV infection., Funding: The trial was funded as investigator initiated research by Pfizer Inc, New York, NY, USA., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov . ID: NCT00988780 (http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00988780).
- Published
- 2014
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120. A correlate of HIV-1 control consisting of both innate and adaptive immune parameters best predicts viral load by multivariable analysis in HIV-1 infected viremic controllers and chronically-infected non-controllers.
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Tomescu C, Liu Q, Ross BN, Yin X, Lynn K, Mounzer KC, Kostman JR, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Multivariate Analysis, RNA, Viral blood, Viremia, Adaptive Immunity, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Immunity, Innate, Viral Load
- Abstract
HIV-1 infected viremic controllers maintain durable viral suppression below 2000 copies viral RNA/ml without anti-retroviral therapy (ART), and the immunological factor(s) associated with host control in presence of low but detectable viral replication are of considerable interest. Here, we utilized a multivariable analysis to identify which innate and adaptive immune parameters best correlated with viral control utilizing a cohort of viremic controllers (median 704 viral RNA/ml) and non-controllers (median 21,932 viral RNA/ml) that were matched for similar CD4+ T cell counts in the absence of ART. We observed that HIV-1 Gag-specific CD8+ T cell responses were preferentially targeted over Pol-specific responses in viremic controllers (p = 0.0137), while Pol-specific responses were positively associated with viral load (rho = 0.7753, p = 0.0001, n = 23). Viremic controllers exhibited significantly higher NK and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) frequency as well as retained expression of the NK CD16 receptor and strong target cell-induced NK cell IFN-gamma production compared to non-controllers (p<0.05). Despite differences in innate and adaptive immune function however, both viremic controllers (p<0.05) and non-controller subjects (p<0.001) exhibited significantly increased CD8+ T cell activation and spontaneous NK cell degranulation compared to uninfected donors. Overall, we identified that a combination of innate (pDC frequency) and adaptive (Pol-specific CD8+ T cell responses) immune parameters best predicted viral load (R2 = 0.5864, p = 0.0021, n = 17) by a multivariable analysis. Together, this data indicates that preferential Gag-specific over Pol-specific CD8+ T cell responses along with a retention of functional innate subsets best predict host control over viral replication in HIV-1 infected viremic controllers compared to chronically-infected non-controllers.
- Published
- 2014
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121. Serial cervicovaginal exposures with replication-deficient SIVsm induce higher dendritic cell (pDC) and CD4+ T-cell infiltrates not associated with prevention but a more severe SIVmac251 infection of rhesus macaques.
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Abdulhaqq SA, Martinez MI, Kang G, Foulkes AS, Rodriguez IV, Nichols SM, Hunter M, Sariol CA, Ruiz LA, Ross BN, Yin X, Speicher DW, Haase AT, Marx PA, Li Q, Kraiselburd EN, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Animals, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cervix Uteri virology, Endometrium virology, Female, Macaca mulatta, Plasma virology, Vagina virology, Viral Load, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cervix Uteri immunology, Dendritic Cells immunology, Endometrium immunology, Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome immunology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus immunology, Vagina immunology
- Abstract
Objective: Intravaginal exposure to simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) acutely recruits interferon-alpha (IFN-α) producing plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) and CD4 T-lymphocyte targets to the endocervix of nonhuman primates. We tested the impact of repeated cervicovaginal exposures to noninfectious, defective SIV particles over 72 hours on a subsequent cervicovaginal challenge with replication competent SIV., Methods: Thirty-four female Indian Rhesus macaques were given a 3-day twice-daily vaginal exposures to either SIVsmB7, a replication-deficient derivative of SIVsmH3 produced by a T lymphoblast CEMx174 cell clone (n = 16), or to CEM supernatant controls (n = 18). On the fourth day, animals were either euthanized to assess cervicovaginal immune cell infiltration or intravaginally challenged with SIVmac251. Challenged animals were tracked for plasma viral load and CD4 counts and euthanized at 42 days after infection., Results: At the time of challenge, macaques exposed to SIVsmB7, had higher levels of cervical CD123 pDCs (P = 0.032) and CD4 T cells (P = 0.036) than those exposed to CEM control. Vaginal tissues showed a significant increase in CD4 T-cell infiltrates (P = 0.048) and a trend toward increased CD68 cellular infiltrates. After challenge, 12 SIVsmB7-treated macaques showed 2.5-fold greater daily rate of CD4 decline (P = 0.0408), and viral load rise (P = 0.0036) as compared with 12 control animals., Conclusions: Repeated nonproductive exposure to viral particles within a short daily time frame did not protect against infection despite pDC recruitment, resulting instead in an accelerated CD4 T-cell loss with an increased rate of viral replication.
- Published
- 2014
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122. Identification of a 251 gene expression signature that can accurately detect M. tuberculosis in patients with and without HIV co-infection.
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Dawany N, Showe LC, Kossenkov AV, Chang C, Ive P, Conradie F, Stevens W, Sanne I, Azzoni L, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Male, Sensitivity and Specificity, South Africa, Support Vector Machine, Coinfection microbiology, Coinfection virology, HIV Infections microbiology, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Transcriptome genetics, Tuberculosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Co-infection with tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death in HIV-infected individuals. However, diagnosis of TB, especially in the presence of an HIV co-infection, can be limiting due to the high inaccuracy associated with the use of conventional diagnostic methods. Here we report a gene signature that can identify a tuberculosis infection in patients co-infected with HIV as well as in the absence of HIV., Methods: We analyzed global gene expression data from peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples of patients that were either mono-infected with HIV or co-infected with HIV/TB and used support vector machines to identify a gene signature that can distinguish between the two classes. We then validated our results using publically available gene expression data from patients mono-infected with TB., Results: Our analysis successfully identified a 251-gene signature that accurately distinguishes patients co-infected with HIV/TB from those infected with HIV only, with an overall accuracy of 81.4% (sensitivity = 76.2%, specificity = 86.4%). Furthermore, we show that our 251-gene signature can also accurately distinguish patients with active TB in the absence of an HIV infection from both patients with a latent TB infection and healthy controls (88.9-94.7% accuracy; 69.2-90% sensitivity and 90.3-100% specificity). We also demonstrate that the expression levels of the 251-gene signature diminish as a correlate of the length of TB treatment., Conclusions: A 251-gene signature is described to (a) detect TB in the presence or absence of an HIV co-infection, and (b) assess response to treatment following anti-TB therapy.
- Published
- 2014
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123. Immunological effects of the TGFβ-blocking antibody GC1008 in malignant pleural mesothelioma patients.
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Stevenson JP, Kindler HL, Papasavvas E, Sun J, Jacobs-Small M, Hull J, Schwed D, Ranganathan A, Newick K, Heitjan DF, Langer CJ, McPherson JM, Montaner LJ, and Albelda SM
- Abstract
We evaluated a neutralizing anti-TGFβ antibody (GC1008) in cancer patients with malignant pleura mesothelioma (MPM). The goal of this study was to assess immunoregulatory effects in relation to clinical safety and clinical response. Patients with progressive MPM and 1-2 prior systemic therapies received GC1008 at 3mg/kg IV over 90 min every 21 d as part of an open-label, two-center Phase II trial. Following TGFβ blockade therapy, clinical safety and patient survival were monitored along with the effects of anti-TGFβ antibodies on serum biomarkers and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Although designed as a larger trial, only 13 patients were enrolled when the manufacturer discontinued further development of the antibody for oncology indications. All participants tolerated therapy. Although partial or complete radiographic responses were not observed, three patients showed stable disease at 3 mo. GC1008 had no effect in the expression of NK, CD4
+ , or CD8+ T cell activating and inhibitory markers, other than a decrease in the expression of 2B4 and DNAM-1 on NK cells. However, serum from 5 patients showed new or enhanced levels of antibodies against MPM tumor lysates as measured by immunoblotting. Patients who produced anti-tumor antibodies had increased median overall survival (OS) (15 vs 7.5 mo, p < 0.03) compared with those who did not. To our knowledge, these data represent the first immune analysis of TGFβ- blockade in human cancer patients.- Published
- 2013
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124. Improved treatment for primary HIV infection by interferon-alfa therapy? Does HCV treatment in HIV/HCV coinfected patients help us to test this hypothesis? Reply to zur Wiesch and van Lunzen.
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Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Papasavvas E, Mexas AM, Lynn KM, Mounzer K, Tebas P, Jacobson JM, Frank I, O'Doherty U, Kostman J, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, HIV-1 drug effects, Interferon-alpha therapeutic use, Polyethylene Glycols therapeutic use, Virus Integration drug effects, Virus Replication drug effects
- Published
- 2013
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125. Antiviral effects of autologous CD4 T cells genetically modified with a conditionally replicating lentiviral vector expressing long antisense to HIV.
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Tebas P, Stein D, Binder-Scholl G, Mukherjee R, Brady T, Rebello T, Humeau L, Kalos M, Papasavvas E, Montaner LJ, Schullery D, Shaheen F, Brennan AL, Zheng Z, Cotte J, Slepushkin V, Veloso E, Mackley A, Hwang WT, Aberra F, Zhan J, Boyer J, Collman RG, Bushman FD, Levine BL, and June CH
- Subjects
- Adoptive Transfer methods, Adult, Antiviral Agents adverse effects, Antiviral Agents metabolism, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes physiology, Female, Genetic Therapy adverse effects, Genetic Vectors adverse effects, Genetic Vectors metabolism, Genetic Vectors pharmacology, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Humans, Lentivirus metabolism, Lentivirus physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Oligonucleotides administration & dosage, Oligonucleotides genetics, Oligonucleotides, Antisense administration & dosage, Oligonucleotides, Antisense adverse effects, Oligonucleotides, Antisense genetics, Transduction, Genetic methods, Viral Load drug effects, Virus Replication genetics, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes transplantation, Genetic Therapy methods, HIV Infections therapy, HIV-1 genetics, Lentivirus genetics, Oligonucleotides, Antisense pharmacology
- Abstract
We report the safety and tolerability of 87 infusions of lentiviral vector–modified autologous CD4 T cells (VRX496-T; trade name, Lexgenleucel-T) in 17 HIV patients with well-controlled viremia. Antiviral effects were studied during analytic treatment interruption in a subset of 13 patients. VRX496-T was associated with a decrease in viral load set points in 6 of 8 subjects (P = .08). In addition, A → G transitions were enriched in HIV sequences after infusion, which is consistent with a model in which transduced CD4 T cells exert antisense-mediated genetic pressure on HIV during infection. Engraftment of vector-modified CD4 T cells was measured in gut-associated lymphoid tissue and was correlated with engraftment in blood. The engraftment half-life in the blood was approximately 5 weeks, with stable persistence in some patients for up to 5 years. Conditional replication of VRX496 was detected periodically through 1 year after infusion. No evidence of clonal selection of lentiviral vector–transduced T cells or integration enrichment near oncogenes was detected. This is the first demonstration that gene-modified cells can exert genetic pressure on HIV. We conclude that gene-modified T cells have the potential to decrease the fitness of HIV-1 and conditionally replicative lentiviral vectors have a promising safety profile in T cells.
- Published
- 2013
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126. Pegylated Interferon alfa-2a monotherapy results in suppression of HIV type 1 replication and decreased cell-associated HIV DNA integration.
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Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Papasavvas E, Mexas AM, Lynn KM, Mounzer K, Tebas P, Jacobson JM, Frank I, Busch MP, Deeks SG, Carrington M, O'Doherty U, Kostman J, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Antiviral Agents administration & dosage, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Immunotherapy, Interferon-alpha administration & dosage, Interferon-alpha pharmacology, Male, Middle Aged, Polyethylene Glycols administration & dosage, Polyethylene Glycols pharmacology, Recombinant Proteins administration & dosage, Recombinant Proteins pharmacology, Recombinant Proteins therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, HIV-1 drug effects, Interferon-alpha therapeutic use, Polyethylene Glycols therapeutic use, Virus Integration drug effects, Virus Replication drug effects
- Abstract
Background: Antiretroviral therapy (ART)-mediated immune reconstitution fails to restore the capacity of the immune system to spontaneously control human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication., Methods: A total of 23 HIV type 1 (HIV-1)-infected, virologically suppressed subjects receiving ART (CD4(+) T-cell count, >450 cells/μL) were randomly assigned to have 180 μg/week (for arm A) or 90 μg/week (for arm B) of pegylated (Peg) interferon alfa-2a added to their current ART regimen. After 5 weeks, ART was interrupted, and Peg-interferon alfa-2a was continued for up to 12 weeks (the primary end point), with an option to continue to 24 weeks. End points included virologic failure (viral load, ≥ 400 copies/mL) and adverse events. Residual viral load and HIV-1 DNA integration were also assessed., Results: At week 12 of Peg-interferon alfa-2a monotherapy, viral suppression was observed in 9 of 20 subjects (45%), a significantly greater proportion than expected (arm A, P = .0088; arm B, P = .0010; combined arms, P < .0001). Over 24 weeks, both arms had lower proportions of subjects who had viral load, compared with the proportion of subjects in a historical control group (arm A, P = .0046; arm B, P = .0011). Subjects who had a sustained viral load of <400 copies/mL had decreased levels of integrated HIV DNA (P = .0313) but increased residual viral loads (P = .0078), compared with subjects who experienced end-point failure., Conclusions: Peg-interferon alfa-2a immunotherapy resulted in control of HIV replication and decreased HIV-1 integration, supporting a role for immunomediated approaches in HIV suppression and/or eradication., Clinical Trials Registration: NCT00594880.
- Published
- 2013
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127. Effects of behavioral stress reduction Transcendental Meditation intervention in persons with HIV.
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Chhatre S, Metzger DS, Frank I, Boyer J, Thompson E, Nidich S, Montaner LJ, and Jayadevappa R
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Participation, Risk Reduction Behavior, Single-Blind Method, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic etiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic prevention & control, Stress, Psychological etiology, Stress, Psychological prevention & control, Treatment Outcome, Diet, HIV Infections psychology, Meditation methods, Quality of Life, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, Stress, Psychological therapy
- Abstract
Stress is implicated in the pathogenesis and progression of HIV. The Transcendental Meditation (TM) is a behavioral stress reduction program that incorporates mind-body approach, and has demonstrated effectiveness in improving outcomes via stress reduction. We evaluated the feasibility of implementing TM and its effects on outcomes in persons with HIV. In this community-based single blinded Phase-I, randomized controlled trial, outcomes (psychological and physiological stress, immune activation, generic and HIV-specific health-related quality of life, depression and quality of well-being) were assessed at baseline and at six months, and were compared using parametric and nonparametric tests. Twenty-two persons with HIV were equally randomized to TM intervention or healthy eating (HE) education control group. Retention was 100% in TM group and 91% in HE control group. The TM group exhibited significant improvement in vitality. Significant between group differences were observed for generic and HIV-specific health-related quality of life. Small sample size may possibly limit the ability to observe significant differences in some outcomes. TM stress reduction intervention in community dwelling adults with HIV is viable and can enhance health-related quality of life. Further research with large sample and longer follow-up is needed to validate our results.
- Published
- 2013
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128. Concurrent measures of total and integrated HIV DNA monitor reservoirs and ongoing replication in eradication trials.
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Mexas AM, Graf EH, Pace MJ, Yu JJ, Papasavvas E, Azzoni L, Busch MP, Di Mascio M, Foulkes AS, Migueles SA, Montaner LJ, and O'Doherty U
- Subjects
- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers metabolism, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes drug effects, Clinical Trials as Topic, Disease Reservoirs virology, Female, Humans, Interferon-alpha therapeutic use, Male, Middle Aged, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Viral Load drug effects, Viremia virology, Virus Integration drug effects, Virus Replication drug effects, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, DNA, Viral drug effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, Interferon-alpha pharmacology
- Abstract
Objectives: Interest in targeting HIV reservoirs is fueling trials that may decrease reservoir size and/or induce viral replication. Therefore, we aimed to develop strategies to sensitively measure changes in these parameters in patients on and off antiretroviral therapy (ART). Achieving these goals may help evaluate the effects of future clinical trials., Design: To determine the relationship between measurements of total and integrated HIV DNA and their role as markers of reservoir size and ongoing replication, these parameters were measured during the first year of ART, during long-term effective ART, and during a clinical trial aimed at targeting reservoirs., Methods: Total and integrated HIV DNA were measured in patient samples using quantitative PCR techniques. CD4(+)T cell counts and plasma viremia were also monitored., Results: Unintegrated HIV DNA became undetectable during the first year of ART. Total and integrated HIV DNA levels were generally equal in well controlled patients on ART, and low-level plasma viremia correlated best with integration measures. Finally, patients who controlled plasma viremia (<400 copies/ml) during interferon-α monotherapy exhibited a decrease in the level of integrated but not total HIV DNA and a rise in the ratio of total to integrated HIV DNA over time., Conclusion: Our findings suggest that appearance of unintegrated HIV DNA reflects residual HIV expression and de-novo reverse transcription, providing insight into the mechanism by which interferon-α reduces the HIV reservoir. We conclude that concurrent measurements of total and integrated HIV DNA provide information regarding reservoir size and ongoing replication in trials targeting HIV.
- Published
- 2012
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129. Impact of protective killer inhibitory receptor/human leukocyte antigen genotypes on natural killer cell and T-cell function in HIV-1-infected controllers.
- Author
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Tomescu C, Duh FM, Hoh R, Viviani A, Harvill K, Martin MP, Carrington M, Deeks SG, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome metabolism, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome physiopathology, Adaptive Immunity, Adult, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, California, Disease Progression, Female, Genotype, HIV Seropositivity metabolism, HIV Seropositivity physiopathology, Humans, Immunity, Innate, Male, RNA, Viral, Receptors, KIR3DL1 genetics, Receptors, KIR3DL1 metabolism, Virus Replication immunology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome immunology, HIV Seropositivity immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Receptors, KIR immunology, Receptors, KIR3DL1 immunology
- Abstract
Objective: Both protective T-cell genotypes and natural killer (NK) cell genotypes have been associated with delayed progression to AIDS and shown to be co-inherited in HIV-1-infected individuals who limit viral replication in absence of antiretroviral therapy ('controllers'). However, a comparative analysis of the genotype and function of the innate and adaptive immune compartments in HIV-1-infected controller individuals has been understudied to date., Design: Here, we simultaneously tested NK and T-cell function in controllers to investigate the mechanism(s) that might account for host immune control over viral replication., Methods: We measured CD8 T-cell responses against HIV-1 utilizing overlapping 15-mer peptides spanning the HIV-1 consensus clade B Gag protein and tested NK cell degranulation and cytokine secretion against tumor target cells following interferon-α (IFNα) stimulation., Results: Among a cohort of 37 controllers, the presence of protective major histocompatibility complex class I human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles (such as HLA-B*57) was not correlated with HIV-specific CD8 responses. In contrast, the inheritance of a protective killer inhibitory receptor KIR3DL1*h/*y receptor genotype along with the corresponding HLA-Bw4*80I ligand was associated with significantly heightened target cell-induced NK degranulation and cytokine secretion following IFNα stimulation (P = 0.0201, n = 13). Interestingly, we observed a significant inverse association between the IFNα stimulated NK response to K562 cells and the HIV-specific CD8 T-cell response to Gag among elite controllers (rho = -0.8321, P = 0.0010, n = 12)., Conclusion: Together, these results suggest that heightened NK responses can be evidenced independently of HIV-specific T-cell responses in HIV-1-infected elite controllers.
- Published
- 2012
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130. Retinoblastoma protein induction by HIV viremia or CCR5 in monocytes exposed to HIV-1 mediates protection from activation-induced apoptosis: ex vivo and in vitro study.
- Author
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Gekonge B, Raymond AD, Yin X, Kostman J, Mounzer K, Collman RG, Showe L, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Monocytes cytology, Monocytes immunology, Receptors, CCR5 genetics, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism, Retinoblastoma Protein physiology, Signal Transduction immunology, Transcriptional Activation immunology, Viremia immunology, Virus Inactivation, Apoptosis immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Monocytes virology, Receptors, CCR5 physiology, Retinoblastoma Protein biosynthesis, Retinoblastoma Protein genetics
- Abstract
We have previously described an antiapoptotic steady-state gene expression profile in circulating human monocytes from asymptomatic viremic HIV(+) donors, but the mechanism associated with this apoptosis resistance remains to be fully elucidated. Here, we show that Rb1 activation is a dominant feature of apoptosis resistance in monocytes exposed to HIV-1 in vivo (as measured ex vivo) and in vitro. Monocytes from asymptomatic viremic HIV(+) individuals show a positive correlation between levels of hypophosphorylated (active) Rb1 and VL in conjunction with increases in other p53-inducible proteins associated with antiapoptosis regulation, such as p21 and PAI-1 (SERPINE1), when compared with circulating monocytes from uninfected donors. Monocytes exposed in vitro to HIV-1 R5 isolates but not X4 isolates showed lower caspase-3 activation after apoptosis induction, indicating a role for the CCR5 signaling pathway. Moreover, monocytes exposed to R5 HIV-1 or MIP-1 β induced Rb1 and p21 expression and an accumulation of autophagy markers, LC3 and Beclin. The inhibition of Rb1 activity in HIV-1 R5 viral-exposed monocytes using siRNA led to increased apoptosis sensitivity, thereby confirming a central role for Rb1 in the antiapoptotic phenotype. Our data identify Rb1 induction in chronic asymptomatic HIV-1 infection as a mediator of apoptosis resistance in monocytes in association with protective autophagy and contributing to monocyte survival during immune activation and/or HIV-1 viremia.
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- 2012
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131. Antiretroviral therapy interruptions result in loss of protective humoral immunity to neoantigens in HIV-infected individuals.
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Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Firnhaber C, Yin X, Xiang ZQ, Li Y, Stevens W, Gross R, Ertl HC, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
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- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome drug therapy, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome epidemiology, Adult, Africa South of the Sahara, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Humans, Lopinavir administration & dosage, Lymphocyte Activation, Male, Ritonavir administration & dosage, Stavudine administration & dosage, Viral Load, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome immunology, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antigens, Viral immunology, Autoantigens immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Immunity, Humoral immunology
- Abstract
Objective: Sustained antiretroviral therapy (ART)-mediated viral suppression restores responses to vaccination in HIV-1-infected individuals. As ART interruption occur frequently in resource-constrained settings, we studied their effects on the ability to mount humoral immune responses against a neoantigen., Design: Treatment-naive HIV-1-infected individuals were treated with stavudine, lamuvidine and lopinavir/ritonovir. Individuals who maintained viral load less than 50 copies/ml and CD4 T-cell counts more than 450 cells/μl for 6 months received three doses of rabies vaccine, and were randomized to 72 weeks of continuous ART (arm 1) or sequential 2, 4 and 8-week ART interruptions (arm 2). An additional vaccine dose was administered at study end., Methods: Neutralizing antibody titers to rabies virus were assessed in plasma with a rapid fluorescent focus-inhibiting test., Results: The proportion of participants achieving protective (>0.5 IU/ml) antibody titer after vaccination was similar (arm 1=92%; arm 2=91%), but over time the cumulative proportion of observations with protective titer was greater in arm 1 than arm 2 (P=0.0177). From week 26 after vaccination, antibody titers were lower in arm 2 than arm 1, and volunteers in arm 2 lost protective antibody titers at a greater rate (P=0.0029). After boosting, 100% of arm 1 and 95% arm 2 volunteers achieved protective antibody titer., Conclusion: Our data indicate that individuals undergoing recurring ART interruption retain lower neutralizing antibody titers to a neoantigen, but maintain the ability to mount secondary responses upon boosting, suggesting that they might benefit from vaccine schedule intensification.
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- 2012
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132. Constitutive gene expression in monocytes from chronic HIV-1 infection overlaps with acute Toll-like receptor induced monocyte activation profiles.
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Gekonge B, Giri MS, Kossenkov AV, Nebozyhn M, Yousef M, Mounzer K, Showe L, and Montaner LJ
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- Adult, Female, Flow Cytometry methods, Humans, Inflammation, Macrophages cytology, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Biological, Principal Component Analysis, Signal Transduction, Toll-Like Receptor 2 metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV-1 metabolism, Monocytes cytology, Monocytes metabolism, Toll-Like Receptors metabolism
- Abstract
Elevated TLR expression/signalling in monocyte/macrophages has been shown to mediate systemic immune activation, a hallmark of progressive HIV-1 infection. Here we show, via differential gene expression comparisons, the presence of a constitutive in vivo TLR-like gene activation signature in steady-state circulating monocytes from chronically HIV-1 infected subjects. The TLR2-like gene signature was defined as an 82 gene subset of the 376 genes constitutively modulated in in vivo HIV-1 monocytes, based on their overlap with de novo TLR2-induced genes in uninfected subjects' monocytes following acute ex vivo stimulation with Staphylococcus Aureus Cowan (SAC). Additional comparison of in vivo gene networks with available datasets from acute TLR activations in M/M expanded the overlap to 151-gene concordance among the 376 differential genes with emphasis on ERK/MAPK, TNF/IL6 (NFκB) and p53 gene networks. TLR2 stimulation of monocytes from HIV-1 infected subjects resulted in further upregulation of inflammatory genes indicative of a sustained transcriptional potential upon stimulation. In summary, our data support the presence of a sustained TLR-like gene activation profile in circulating monocyte from steady-state viremia in HIV-1 infected subjects.
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- 2012
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133. Increased CD34+/KDR+ cells are not associated with carotid artery intima-media thickness progression in chronic HIV-positive subjects.
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Papasavvas E, Hsue P, Reynolds G, Pistilli M, Hancock A, Martin JN, Deeks SG, and Montaner LJ
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- Carotid Arteries diagnostic imaging, Chronic Disease, Disease Progression, Endothelial Cells cytology, Endothelium, Vascular physiopathology, Female, Flow Cytometry, HIV Infections pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Stem Cells cytology, Tunica Intima diagnostic imaging, Tunica Media diagnostic imaging, Antigens, CD34 metabolism, Atherosclerosis physiopathology, Carotid Intima-Media Thickness, Endothelial Cells metabolism, HIV Infections complications, Stem Cells metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) are involved in the endothelium repair. Low circulating EPC levels are predictive of cardiovascular events in HIV-negative subjects. The impact of HIV infection on EPCs, and the role of EPCs in HIV-associated cardiovascular disease, is not known. We hypothesized that circulating EPCs would be inversely associated with carotid artery intima-media thickness (c-IMT) changes in HIV-infected subjects., Methods: EPCs (CD34(+)/KDR(+), CD133(+)/KDR(+) and CD34(+)/CD133(+)/KDR(+)) were defined retrospectively by flow cytometry in cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells collected longitudinally from 66 chronic HIV-infected subjects and cross-sectionally from 50 at-risk HIV-negative subjects. The HIV-infected subjects participated in the Study of the Consequences of the Protease Inhibitor Era (SCOPE) cohort, were receiving antiretroviral therapy (59/66) and had two sequential measurements of c-IMT 1 year apart. Two distinct groups of HIV-infected subjects were identified a priori: rapid c-IMT progressors (subjects with rapid c-IMT progression, n=13, Δc-IMT>0.2 mm) and slow c-IMT progressors (subjects with slow or no c-IMT progression, n=53, Δc-IMT<0.2 mm)., Results: Although cryopreservation reduced sensitivity of detection, EPC frequency in HIV-infected subjects was still significantly higher compared to at-risk HIV-negative subjects (CD34(+)/KDR(+); P=0.01) and correlated positively with CD4(+) T-cell count (CD34(+)/KDR(+), r=0.27; P=0.03). No association was found between the change of EPC frequencies over time (ΔEPC) and Δc-IMT or between EPC frequencies and c-IMT or Δc-IMT., Conclusions: The lack of an association between EPCs and c-IMT in our cohort does not support HIV-associated reductions in EPC frequency as a cause of accelerated atherosclerosis.
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- 2012
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134. Prioritizing CD4 count monitoring in response to ART in resource-constrained settings: a retrospective application of prediction-based classification.
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Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Liu Y, Li X, Johnson M, Smith C, Kamarulzaman AB, Montaner J, Mounzer K, Saag M, Cahn P, Cesar C, Krolewiecki A, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Anti-HIV Agents economics, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers blood, CD4 Lymphocyte Count economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Follow-Up Studies, HIV Infections classification, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Leukocyte Count methods, Models, Biological, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Triage, Anti-HIV Agents immunology, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active economics, CD4 Lymphocyte Count methods, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, HIV Infections immunology, Health Resources, Resource Allocation
- Abstract
Background: Global programs of anti-HIV treatment depend on sustained laboratory capacity to assess treatment initiation thresholds and treatment response over time. Currently, there is no valid alternative to CD4 count testing for monitoring immunologic responses to treatment, but laboratory cost and capacity limit access to CD4 testing in resource-constrained settings. Thus, methods to prioritize patients for CD4 count testing could improve treatment monitoring by optimizing resource allocation., Methods and Findings: Using a prospective cohort of HIV-infected patients (n=1,956) monitored upon antiretroviral therapy initiation in seven clinical sites with distinct geographical and socio-economic settings, we retrospectively apply a novel prediction-based classification (PBC) modeling method. The model uses repeatedly measured biomarkers (white blood cell count and lymphocyte percent) to predict CD4(+) T cell outcome through first-stage modeling and subsequent classification based on clinically relevant thresholds (CD4(+) T cell count of 200 or 350 cells/µl). The algorithm correctly classified 90% (cross-validation estimate=91.5%, standard deviation [SD]=4.5%) of CD4 count measurements <200 cells/µl in the first year of follow-up; if laboratory testing is applied only to patients predicted to be below the 200-cells/µl threshold, we estimate a potential savings of 54.3% (SD=4.2%) in CD4 testing capacity. A capacity savings of 34% (SD=3.9%) is predicted using a CD4 threshold of 350 cells/µl. Similar results were obtained over the 3 y of follow-up available (n=619). Limitations include a need for future economic healthcare outcome analysis, a need for assessment of extensibility beyond the 3-y observation time, and the need to assign a false positive threshold., Conclusions: Our results support the use of PBC modeling as a triage point at the laboratory, lessening the need for laboratory-based CD4(+) T cell count testing; implementation of this tool could help optimize the use of laboratory resources, directing CD4 testing towards higher-risk patients. However, further prospective studies and economic analyses are needed to demonstrate that the PBC model can be effectively applied in clinical settings. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
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- 2012
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135. Natural killer cell activation distinguishes Mycobacterium tuberculosis-mediated immune reconstitution syndrome from chronic HIV and HIV/MTB coinfection.
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Conradie F, Foulkes AS, Ive P, Yin X, Roussos K, Glencross DK, Lawrie D, Stevens W, Montaner LJ, Sanne I, and Azzoni L
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- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active methods, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cytokines metabolism, Female, Flow Cytometry, HIV Infections complications, Humans, Male, South Africa, Tuberculosis complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections immunology, Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome diagnosis, Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Mycobacterium tuberculosis immunology, Tuberculosis immunology
- Abstract
Background: With increased access to antiretroviral treatment (ART), immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB)-infected populations remains a clinical challenge. We studied a cross-sectional cohort of HIV-infected subjects in Johannesburg (South Africa) to help define the immune correlates that best distinguish IRIS from ongoing MTB cases., Methods: We studied HIV+ subjects developing MTB-related unmasking tuberculosis-related immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (uTB-IRIS) after ART initiation; control groups were subjects with HIV and HIV/tuberculosis-coinfected subjects with comparable ART treatment. Testing was conducted with whole blood-based 4-color flow cytometry and plasma-based Luminex cytokine assessment., Results: Natural killer cell activation, C-reactive protein, and interleukin 8 serum concentration were significantly higher in uTB-IRIS subjects compared with both control groups. In addition, all MTB-coinfected subjects, independent of clinical presentation, had higher neutrophils and T-cell activation, together with lower lymphocytes, CD4⁺ T-cell, and myeloid dendritic cell counts. Using conditional inference tree analysis, we show that elevated natural killer cell activation in combination with lymphocyte count characterizes the immunological profile of uTB-IRIS., Conclusion: Our results support a role for innate immune effectors in the immunopathogenesis of unmasking MTB-related IRIS and identify new immune parameters defining this pathology.
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- 2011
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136. Increased microbial translocation in ≤ 180 days old perinatally human immunodeficiency virus-positive infants as compared with human immunodeficiency virus-exposed uninfected infants of similar age.
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Papasavvas E, Azzoni L, Foulkes A, Violari A, Cotton MF, Pistilli M, Reynolds G, Yin X, Glencross DK, Stevens WS, McIntyre JA, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- HIV pathogenicity, Humans, Infant, South Africa, Time Factors, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active methods, Bacteremia diagnosis, Bacterial Translocation, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, Lipopolysaccharides blood
- Abstract
Background: The effect of early versus deferred antiretroviral treatment (ART) on plasma concentration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and host LPS-binding molecules in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected infants up to 1 year of age was investigated., Methods: We evaluated 54 perinatally HIV-infected and 22 HIV-exposed uninfected infants (controls) at the first and second semester of life. All HIV-infected infants had a baseline CD4 of ≥ 25%, participated in the Comprehensive International Program of Research on AIDS Children with HIV Early Antiretroviral Therapy trial in South Africa, and were randomized in the following groups: group 1 (n = 20), ART deferred until CD4 < 25% or severe HIV disease; and group 2 (n = 34), ART initiation within 6 to 12 weeks of age. LPS, endotoxin-core antibodies, soluble CD14 (sCD14), and LPS-binding protein (LBP) were measured in cryopreserved plasma. T-cell activation was measured in fresh whole blood., Results: At the first semester, LPS concentration was higher in HIV-infected infants than in controls; sCD14, LBP, and T-cell activation were higher in group 1 than in group 2 and controls. Although LPS was not correlated with study variables, viral load was positively associated with sCD14, LBP, or endotoxin-core antibodies. At the second semester, LPS was not detectable and elevated host LPS-control molecules values were sustained in all groups and in conjunction with ART in all HIV-infected infants., Conclusions: Although plasma concentration of LPS was higher in perinatally HIV-infected infants 0 to 6 months of age than in controls independent of ART initiation strategy, concentration of LPS-control molecules was higher in infants with deferred ART, suggesting the presence of increased microbial translocation in HIV-infected infants with sustained early viral replication.
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- 2011
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137. Metabolic and anthropometric parameters contribute to ART-mediated CD4+ T cell recovery in HIV-1-infected individuals: an observational study.
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Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Firnhaber C, Yin X, Crowther NJ, Glencross D, Lawrie D, Stevens W, Papasavvas E, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Absorptiometry, Photon, Adult, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cohort Studies, Female, Flow Cytometry, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Serum chemistry, South Africa, Treatment Outcome, Adiposity physiology, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active methods, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections immunology, Lipid Metabolism
- Abstract
Background: The degree of immune reconstitution achieved in response to suppressive ART is associated with baseline individual characteristics, such as pre-treatment CD4 count, levels of viral replication, cellular activation, choice of treatment regimen and gender. However, the combined effect of these variables on long-term CD4 recovery remains elusive, and no single variable predicts treatment response. We sought to determine if adiposity and molecules associated with lipid metabolism may affect the response to ART and the degree of subsequent immune reconstitution, and to assess their ability to predict CD4 recovery., Methods: We studied a cohort of 69 (48 females and 21 males) HIV-infected, treatment-naïve South African subjects initiating antiretroviral treatment (d4T, 3Tc and lopinavir/ritonavir). We collected information at baseline and six months after viral suppression, assessing anthropometric parameters, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry and magnetic resonance imaging scans, serum-based clinical laboratory tests and whole blood-based flow cytometry, and determined their role in predicting the increase in CD4 count in response to ART., Results: We present evidence that baseline CD4+ T cell count, viral load, CD8+ T cell activation (CD95 expression) and metabolic and anthropometric parameters linked to adiposity (LDL/HDL cholesterol ratio and waist/hip ratio) significantly contribute to variability in the extent of CD4 reconstitution (ΔCD4) after six months of continuous ART., Conclusions: Our final model accounts for 44% of the variability in CD4+ T cell recovery in virally suppressed individuals, representing a workable predictive model of immune reconstitution.
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- 2011
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138. Evidence for the innate immune response as a correlate of protection in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 highly exposed seronegative subjects (HESN).
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Tomescu C, Abdulhaqq S, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Chemokines physiology, Defensins physiology, Dendritic Cells immunology, Disease Susceptibility immunology, Female, HIV Antibodies immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Immunoglobulin A immunology, Infant, Newborn, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Macaca mulatta, Needle Sharing, Occupational Exposure, Pregnancy, Risk-Taking, Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome immunology, Virus Replication, HIV Seronegativity immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Immunity, Innate, Immunity, Mucosal immunology
- Abstract
The description of highly exposed individuals who remain seronegative (HESN) despite repeated exposure to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 has heightened interest in identifying potential mechanisms of HIV-1 resistance. HIV-specific humoral and T cell-mediated responses have been identified routinely in HESN subjects, although it remains unknown if these responses are a definitive cause of protection or merely a marker for exposure. Approximately half of HESN lack any detectible HIV-specific adaptive immune responses, suggesting that other mechanisms of protection from HIV-1 infection also probably exist. In support of the innate immune response as a mechanism of resistance, increased natural killer (NK) cell activity has been correlated with protection from infection in several high-risk cohorts of HESN subjects, including intravenous drug users, HIV-1 discordant couples and perinatally exposed infants. Inheritance of protective NK KIR3DL1(high) and KIR3DS1 receptor alleles have also been observed to be over-represented in a high-risk cohort of HESN intravenous drug users and HESN partners of HIV-1-infected subjects. Other intrinsic mechanisms of innate immune protection correlated with resistance in HESN subjects include heightened dendritic cell responses and increased secretion of anti-viral factors such as β-chemokines, small anti-viral factors and defensins. This review will highlight the most current evidence in HESN subjects supporting the role of epithelial microenvironment and the innate immune system in sustaining resistance against HIV-1 infection. We will argue that as a front-line defence the innate immune response determines the threshold of infectivity that HIV-1 must overcome to establish a productive infection., (© 2011 The Authors. Clinical and Experimental Immunology © 2011 British Society for Immunology.)
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- 2011
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139. Decreased dengue replication and an increased anti-viral humoral response with the use of combined Toll-like receptor 3 and 7/8 agonists in macaques.
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Sariol CA, Martínez MI, Rivera F, Rodríguez IV, Pantoja P, Abel K, Arana T, Giavedoni L, Hodara V, White LJ, Angleró YI, Montaner LJ, and Kraiselburd EN
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytokines metabolism, Female, Flow Cytometry, Immunity, Innate, Inflammation, Leukocytes, Mononuclear cytology, Macaca mulatta, Male, Dengue immunology, Dengue Virus genetics, Toll-Like Receptor 3 agonists, Toll-Like Receptor 7 agonists, Toll-Like Receptor 8 agonists, Virus Replication
- Abstract
Background: Pathogenic versus protective outcomes to Dengue virus (DENV) infection are associated with innate immune function. This study aimed to determine the role of increased TLR3- and TLR7/8-mediated innate signaling after Dengue infection of rhesus macaques in vivo to evaluate its impact on disease and anti-DENV immune responses., Methodology/principal Findings: TLR3 and TLR7/8 agonists (emulsified in Montanide) were administered subcutaneously to rhesus macaques at 48 hours and 7 days after DENV infection. The Frequency and activation of myeloid dendritic cells, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, and B cells were measured by flow cytometry while the serum levels of 14 different cytokines and chemokines were quantified. Adaptive immune responses were measured by DENV-specific antibody subtype measurements. Results showed that the combined TLR agonists reduced viral replication and induced the development of a proinflammatory reaction, otherwise absent in Dengue infection alone, without any clear signs of exacerbated disease. Specifically, the TLR-induced response was characterized by activation changes in mDC subsets concurrent with higher serum levels of CXCL-10 and IL-1Ra. TLR stimulation also induced higher titers of anti-DENV antibodies and acted to increase the IgG2/IgG1 ratio of anti-DENV to favor the subtype associated with DENV control. We also observed an effect of DENV-mediated suppression of mDC activation consistent with prior in vitro studies., Conclusions/significance: These data show that concurrent TLR3/7/8 activation of the innate immune response after DENV infection in vivo acts to increase antiviral mechanisms via increased inflammatory and humoral responses in rhesus macaques, resulting in decreased viremia and melioration of the infection. These findings underscore an in vivo protective rather than a pathogenic role for combined TLR3/7/8-mediated activation in Dengue infection of rhesus macaques. Our study provides definitive proof-of-concept into the mechanism by which DENV evades immune recognition and activation in vivo.
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- 2011
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140. Editorial: Is HIV-1 induction of macrophage expression of PD-L1 and PD-L2 its weakest or strongest link to disease? HIV-1 plays both sides by augmenting and limiting T cell activation to survive in vivo.
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Patro SC and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- B7-H1 Antigen, Humans, Lymphocyte Activation, Programmed Cell Death 1 Ligand 2 Protein, Antigens, CD metabolism, B7-1 Antigen metabolism, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV-1 immunology, Macrophages metabolism
- Published
- 2011
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141. Unique Cytokine/Chemokine Signatures for HIV-1 and HCV Mono-infection versus Co-infection as Determined by the Luminex® Analyses.
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Rahman S, Connolly JE, Manuel SL, Chehimi J, Montaner LJ, and Jain P
- Abstract
Liver disease caused by HIV-1/HCV co-infection is characterized by the inflammation and cell-death. The co-existence of these two chronic viral infections also alters the cytokine production in vivo. The ability to visualize changes in cytokine networks with the onset and progression of disease or treatment is critical to advance our understanding of the immune response to pathogens. The recent Luminex® technology has revolutionized the simultaneous detection and quantitation of several cytokines and chemokines in clinical samples that are generally available in small quantities. We have applied this technology to analyze the plasma samples from patients who have either HIV-1 or HCV mono-infection or HIV-1/HCV co-infection and monitored the presence of 23 cytokines and chemokines. Of these, 8 (IFN-α2, IL-2, IL-3, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12p70, IL-15 and RANTES) cytokines were expressed at higher levels in the co-infected individuals. Interestingly, in case of HIV-1 mono-infected individuals, the levels of the proinflammatory cytokines IFN-γ and TNF-α were increased. Standard correlation clustering of the normalized data demonstrated unique plasma cytokine signatures for HIV-1/HCV co-infected individuals. These signatures were characterized not only by an up regulation of the aforementioned antiviral mediators but also by a marked down regulation in the chemokines Eotaxin and MIP-1α when compared to mono-infected individuals. Luminex®- based analyses have proven to be a powerful tool for therapeutic immunomonitoring, but may have an even greater impact in the discovery of the underlying immune response at all phases of infection. The study presented herein has potential to offer insight into the underlying mechanisms of immunopathogenesis of HIV-1/HCV co-infection.
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- 2011
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142. Randomized trial of time-limited interruptions of protease inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) vs. continuous therapy for HIV-1 infection.
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Firnhaber C, Azzoni L, Foulkes AS, Gross R, Yin X, Van Amsterdam D, Schulze D, Glencross DK, Stevens W, Hunt G, Morris L, Fox L, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, HIV Infections immunology, Lamivudine therapeutic use, Lopinavir therapeutic use, Ritonavir therapeutic use, Stavudine therapeutic use, Zidovudine therapeutic use, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: The clinical outcomes of short interruptions of PI-based ART regimens remains undefined., Methods: A 2-arm non-inferiority trial was conducted on 53 HIV-1 infected South African participants with viral load <50 copies/ml and CD4 T cell count >450 cells/µl on stavudine (or zidovudine), lamivudine and lopinavir/ritonavir. Subjects were randomized to a) sequential 2, 4 and 8-week ART interruptions or b) continuous ART (cART). Primary analysis was based on the proportion of CD4 count >350 cells(c)/ml over 72 weeks. Adherence, HIV-1 drug resistance, and CD4 count rise over time were analyzed as secondary endpoints., Results: The proportions of CD4 counts >350 cells/µl were 82.12% for the intermittent arm and 93.73 for the cART arm; the difference of 11.95% was above the defined 10% threshold for non-inferiority (upper limit of 97.5% CI, 24.1%; 2-sided CI: -0.16, 23.1). No clinically significant differences in opportunistic infections, adverse events, adherence or viral resistance were noted; after randomization, long-term CD4 rise was observed only in the cART arm., Conclusion: We are unable to conclude that short PI-based ART interruptions are non-inferior to cART in retention of immune reconstitution; however, short interruptions did not lead to a greater rate of resistance mutations or adverse events than cART suggesting that this regimen may be more forgiving than NNRTIs if interruptions in therapy occur., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00100646.
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- 2011
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143. Retention of functional DC-NK cross-talk following up to 18 weeks therapy interruptions in chronically suppressed HIV type 1+ subjects.
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Papasavvas E, Chehimi J, Azzoni L, Pistilli M, Thiel B, Mackiewicz A, Creer S, Mounzer K, Kostman JR, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Drug Administration Schedule, Drug Therapy, Combination, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Virus Replication, Dendritic Cells immunology, HIV Infections therapy, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Killer Cells, Natural immunology
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- 2010
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144. Increased plasmacytoid dendritic cell maturation and natural killer cell activation in HIV-1 exposed, uninfected intravenous drug users.
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Tomescu C, Duh FM, Lanier MA, Kapalko A, Mounzer KC, Martin MP, Carrington M, Metzger DS, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Flow Cytometry, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Seronegativity, Humans, Killer Cells, Natural drug effects, Lymphocyte Activation drug effects, Male, Philadelphia, Dendritic Cells immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Substance Abuse, Intravenous immunology
- Abstract
Background: Increased natural killer (NK) activation has been associated with resistance to HIV-1 infection in several cohorts of HIV-1 exposed, uninfected individuals. Inheritance of protective NK receptor alleles (KIR3DS1 and KIR3DL1) has also been observed in a subset of HIV-1 exposed, uninfected individuals. However, the exact mechanism contributing to NK activation in HIV-1 exposed, uninfected intravenous drug users (EU-IDU) remains to be elucidated., Objective: We investigated the role of both host genotype and pathogen-induced dendritic cell modulation of NK activation during high-risk activity in a cohort of 15 EU-IDU individuals and 15 control, uninfected donors from Philadelphia., Design: We assessed the activation status of NK cells and dendritic cells by flow cytometry and utilized functional assays of NK-DC cross-talk to characterize the innate immune compartment in EU-IDU individuals., Results: As previously reported, NK cell activation (CD69) and/or degranulation (CD107a) was significantly increased in EU-IDU individuals compared with control uninfected donors (P = 0.0056, n = 13). Genotypic analysis indicated that the frequency of protective KIR (KIR3DS1) and HLA-Bw4*80I ligands was not enriched in our cohort of EU-IDU individuals. Rather, plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC) from EU-IDU exhibited heightened maturation (CD83) compared with control uninfected donors (P = 0.0011, n = 12). When stimulated in vitro, both PDCs and NK cells from EU-IDU individuals maintained strong effector cell function and did not exhibit signs of exhaustion., Conclusion: Increased maturation of PDCs is associated with heightened NK activation in EU-IDU individuals suggesting that both members of the innate compartment may contribute to resistance from HIV-1 infection in EU-IDU.
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- 2010
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145. Association between HIV replication and serum leptin levels: an observational study of a cohort of HIV-1-infected South African women.
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Azzoni L, Crowther NJ, Firnhaber C, Foulkes AS, Yin X, Glencross D, Gross R, Kaplan MD, Papasavvas E, Schulze D, Stevens W, van der Merwe T, Waisberg R, Sanne I, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Body Fat Distribution, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Glucose metabolism, Humans, Lipid Metabolism, South Africa, Viral Load, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 growth & development, Leptin blood
- Abstract
Background: Advanced HIV infection can result in lipoatrophy and wasting, even in the absence of ongoing opportunistic infections, suggesting that HIV may directly affect adipose tissue amount and distribution., Methods: We assessed the relationship of fat (measured using anthropometry, DEXA, MRI scans) or markers related to glucose and lipid metabolism with viral load in a cross-sectional sample of 83 antiretroviral-naïve HIV-1-infected South African women. A multivariable linear model was fitted to log10VL to assess the combined effect of these variables., Results: In addition to higher T cell activation, women with viral load greater than the population median had lower waist circumference, body mass index and subcutaneous abdominal fat, as well as lower serum leptin. We demonstrate that leptin serum levels are inversely associated with viral replication, independent of the amount of adipose tissue. This association is maintained after adjusting for multiple variables associated with disease progression (i.e., cellular activation and innate immunity effector levels)., Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that serum leptin levels are inversely associated with viral replication, independent of disease progression: we postulate that leptin may affect viral replication.
- Published
- 2010
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146. Increased metallothionein gene expression, zinc, and zinc-dependent resistance to apoptosis in circulating monocytes during HIV viremia.
- Author
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Raymond AD, Gekonge B, Giri MS, Hancock A, Papasavvas E, Chehimi J, Kossenkov AV, Nicols C, Yousef M, Mounzer K, Shull J, Kostman J, Showe L, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Apoptosis drug effects, Cation Transport Proteins genetics, Cation Transport Proteins metabolism, Cell Movement drug effects, Fas Ligand Protein pharmacology, Gene Expression Regulation drug effects, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 immunology, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Intracellular Space drug effects, Intracellular Space metabolism, Metallothionein metabolism, Monocytes drug effects, Monocytes immunology, Viremia complications, Viremia immunology, Virus Replication drug effects, Apoptosis genetics, Gene Expression Regulation immunology, HIV Infections genetics, Metallothionein genetics, Monocytes pathology, Viremia genetics, Zinc metabolism
- Abstract
Circulating monocytes exhibit an apoptotic resistance phenotype during HIV viremia in association with increased MT expression. MTs are known to play an important role in zinc metabolism and immune function. We now show, in a cross-sectional study using peripheral monocytes, that expression of MT1 isoforms E, G, H, and X is increased significantly in circulating monocyte cells from HIV+ subjects during chronic viremic episodes as compared with uninfected subjects. This increase in expression is also observed during acute viremia following interruption of suppressive ART. Circulating monocytes from HIV+ donors were also found to have elevated zinc importer gene Zip8 expression in conjunction with elevated intracellular zinc levels in contrast to CD4(+)T-lymphocytes. In vitro HIV-1 infection studies with elutriated MDM confirm a direct relation between HIV-1 infection and increased MDM MT1 (isoform G) gene expression and increased intracellular zinc levels. A direct link between elevated zinc levels and apoptosis resistance was established using a cell-permeable zinc chelator TPEN, which reversed apoptosis resistance effectively in monocytes from HIV-infected to levels comparable with uninfected controls. Taken together, increases in MT gene expression and intracellular zinc levels may contribute directly to maintenance of an immune-activated monocyte by mediating an increased resistance to apoptosis during active HIV-1 viremia.
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
147. Prediction based classification for longitudinal biomarkers.
- Author
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Foulkes AS, Azzoni L, Li X, Johnson MA, Smith C, Mounzer K, and Montaner LJ
- Abstract
Assessment of circulating CD4 count change over time in HIV-infected subjects on antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a central component of disease monitoring. The increasing number of HIV-infected subjects starting therapy and the limited capacity to support CD4 count testing within resource-limited settings have fueled interest in identifying correlates of CD4 count change such as total lymphocyte count, among others. The application of modeling techniques will be essential to this endeavor due to the typically non-linear CD4 trajectory over time and the multiple input variables necessary for capturing CD4 variability. We propose a prediction based classification approach that involves first stage modeling and subsequent classification based on clinically meaningful thresholds. This approach draws on existing analytical methods described in the receiver operating characteristic curve literature while presenting an extension for handling a continuous outcome. Application of this method to an independent test sample results in greater than 98% positive predictive value for CD4 count change. The prediction algorithm is derived based on a cohort of n = 270 HIV-1 infected individuals from the Royal Free Hospital, London who were followed for up to three years from initiation of ART. A test sample comprised of n = 72 individuals from Philadelphia and followed for a similar length of time is used for validation. Results suggest that this approach may be a useful tool for prioritizing limited laboratory resources for CD4 testing after subjects start antiretroviral therapy.
- Published
- 2010
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148. Upregulation of SOCS-3 and PIAS-3 impairs IL-12-mediated interferon-gamma response in CD56 T cells in HCV-infected heroin users.
- Author
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Ye L, Wang X, Metzger DS, Riedel E, Montaner LJ, and Ho W
- Subjects
- Hepacivirus metabolism, Heroin, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear cytology, Liver virology, Suppressor of Cytokine Signaling 3 Protein, CD56 Antigen biosynthesis, Gene Expression Regulation, Viral, Hepatitis C complications, Heroin Dependence, Interferon-gamma metabolism, Interleukin-12 metabolism, Molecular Chaperones metabolism, Protein Inhibitors of Activated STAT metabolism, Suppressor of Cytokine Signaling Proteins metabolism, T-Lymphocytes cytology, Up-Regulation
- Abstract
Background: CD56(+) T cells are abundant in liver and play an important role in host innate immunity against viral infections, including hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, a common infection among heroin abusers. We thus investigated the in vivo impact of heroin use or heroin use plus HCV infection on the CD56(+) T cell frequency and function., Methodology/principal Findings: A total of 37 heroin users with (17) or without (20) HCV infection and 17 healthy subjects were included in the study. Although there was no significant difference in CD56(+) T cell frequency in PBMCs among three study groups, CD56(+) T cells isolated from the heroin users had significantly lower levels of constitutive interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) expression than those from the normal subjects. In addition, when stimulated by interleukin (IL)-12, CD56(+) natural T cells from HCV-infected heroin users produced significantly lower levels of IFN-gamma than those from the normal subjects. This diminished ability to produce IFN-gamma by CD56(+) T cells was associated with the increased plasma HCV viral loads in the HCV-infected heroin users. Investigation of the mechanisms showed that although heroin use or heroin use plus HCV infection had little impact on the expression of the key positive regulators (IL-12 receptors, STAT-1, 3, 4, 5, JAK-2, and TYK-2) in IL-12 pathway, heroin use or heroin use plus HCV infection induced the expression of suppressor of cytokine signaling protein-3 (SOCS-3) and protein inhibitors of activated STAT-3 (PIAS-3), two key inhibitors of IL-12 pathway., Conclusion/significance: These findings provide compelling in vivo evidence that heroin use or heroin use plus HCV infection impairs CD56(+) T cell-mediated innate immune function, which may account for HCV infection and persistence in liver.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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149. Inability of plasmacytoid dendritic cells to directly lyse HIV-infected autologous CD4+ T cells despite induction of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand.
- Author
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Chehimi J, Papasavvas E, Tomescu C, Gekonge B, Abdulhaqq S, Raymond A, Hancock A, Vinekar K, Carty C, Reynolds G, Pistilli M, Mounzer K, Kostman J, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes cytology, Cell Line, Dendritic Cells cytology, Female, HIV-1 immunology, Humans, Interferon Regulatory Factor-7 genetics, Interferon Regulatory Factor-7 metabolism, Interferon-alpha immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Male, Receptors, TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand genetics, Receptors, TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand metabolism, TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand genetics, Viral Load, Viremia immunology, Viremia virology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Dendritic Cells metabolism, HIV Infections immunology, TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand immunology
- Abstract
The function of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC) in chronic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection remains controversial with regard to its potential for sustained alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) production and induction of PDC-dependent tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-mediated cytotoxicity of HIV-infected cells. We address these areas by a study of chronically HIV-1-infected subjects followed through antiretroviral therapy (ART) interruption and by testing PDC cytolytic function against autologous HIV-infected CD4(+) T cells. Rebound in viremia induced by therapy interruption showed a positive association between TRAIL and viral load or T-cell activation, but comparable levels of plasma IFN-alpha/beta were found in viremic ART-treated and control subjects. While PDC from HIV-infected subjects expressed less interferon regulator factor 7 (IRF-7) and produced significantly less IFN-alpha upon Toll-like receptor 7/9 (TLR7/9) engagement than controls, membrane TRAIL expression in PDC from HIV(+) subjects was increased. Moreover, no significant increase in death receptor 5 (DR5) expression was seen in CD4(+) T cells from viremic HIV(+) subjects compared to controls or following in vitro infection/exposure to infectious and noninfectious virus or exogenous IFN-alpha, respectively. Although activated PDC killed the DR5-expressing HIV-infected Sup-T1 cell line, PDC did not lyse primary autologous HIV(+) CD4(+) T cells yet could provide accessory help for NK cells in killing HIV-infected autologous CD4(+) T cells. Taken together, our data show a lack of sustained high levels of soluble IFN-alpha in chronic HIV-1 infection in vivo and document a lack of direct PDC cytolytic activity against autologous infected or uninfected CD4(+) T cells.
- Published
- 2010
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150. Retention of viability, cytotoxicity, and response to IL-2, IL-15, or IFN-alpha by human NK cells after CD107a degranulation.
- Author
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Tomescu C, Chehimi J, Maino VC, and Montaner LJ
- Subjects
- Cell Survival, Cells, Cultured, Cytotoxicity, Immunologic immunology, Granzymes immunology, Granzymes metabolism, Humans, Killer Cells, Natural metabolism, Killer Cells, Natural physiology, Lysosomal-Associated Membrane Protein 1 metabolism, Perforin immunology, Perforin metabolism, Cell Degranulation immunology, Interferon-alpha immunology, Interleukin-15 immunology, Interleukin-2 immunology, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Lysosomal-Associated Membrane Protein 1 immunology
- Abstract
NK cells represent a critical component of the host innate immune response to viral infection and tumor transformation. Nevertheless, the fate of recently degranulated NK cells subsequent to a primary target cell interaction remains largely unexplored. Here, we investigated the long-term viability and killing potential of human NK cells following target cell lysis using live-sorting of CD107a-degranulated NK cells. We observed that sorted CD107a+ NK cells exhibited continued lytic potential against a wide variety of target cells, including tumor and virally infected target cells. CD107a-positive- and CD107a-negative-sorted NK cells displayed similar long-term viability, killing potential, and response to inflammatory cytokines such as IL-2, IL-15, and IFN-alpha. Interestingly, we observed that the CD107a signature is remarkably stable over time and that recently degranulated NK cells exhibit an amplification of CD107 expression immediately following a target cell interaction. Together, our data expand previous data showing that NK cells retain the capacity to kill multiple target cells in succession and reveal that NK viability, cytotoxicity, and response to inflammatory cytokines are not altered following a primary target cell interaction. Overall, our data argue for the strength of the NK cell compartment in the continuous surveillance of tumor and virally infected cells in the body and highlight the use of using CD107a expression as a stable marker for NK cytotoxicity.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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