204 research outputs found

    Disturbance of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue is associated with disease progression in chronic HIV infection

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    Why and how HIV makes people sick is highly debated. Recent evidence implicates heightened immune activation due to breakdown of the gastrointestinal barrier as a determining factor of lentiviral pathogenesis. HIV-mediated loss of Th17 cells from the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) impairs mucosal integrity and innate defense mechanisms against gut microbes. Translocation of microbial products from the gut, in turn, correlates with increased immune activation in chronic HIV infection and may further damage the immune system by increasing viral and activation-induced T cell death, by reducing T cell reconstitution due to tissue scarring, and by impairing the function of other cell types, such as γδ T cells and epithelial cells. Maintaining a healthy GALT may be the key to reducing the pathogenic potential of HI

    Multifocal Vasculopathy Due to Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV): Serial Analysis of VZV DNA and Intrathecal Synthesis of VZV Antibody in Cerebrospinal Fluid

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    Recognition of multifocal vasculopathy due to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is often problematic. We describe a human immunodeficiency virus—infected patient who had progressive central nervous system disease for >3 months. Both VZV DNA and antibody were detected in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens; serial polymerase chain reaction analyses confirmed the diagnosis and guided the duration of therapy. Reduced ratios of VZV antibody in serum to that in CSF were also demonstrate

    Selection of Potent Non-Toxic Inhibitory Sequences from a Randomized HIV-1 Specific Lentiviral Short Hairpin RNA Library

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    RNA interference (RNAi) has been considered as an efficient therapeutic approach against the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). However, to establish a durable inhibition of HIV-1, multiple effective short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) need to be stably expressed to prevent the emergence of viral escape variants. In this study, we engineered a randomized lentiviral H1-promoter driven shRNA-library against the viral genome. Potent HIV-1 specific shRNAs were selected by ganciclovir treatment of cell lines stably expressing the cDNA of Herpes Simplex Virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) fused to HIV-1 nucleotide sequences. More than 50% of 200 selected shRNAs inhibited an HIV-1 based luciferase reporter assay by more than 70%. Stable expression of some of those shRNAs in an HIV-1 permissive HeLa cell line inhibited infection of wild-type HIV-1 by more than 90%. The combination of a randomized shRNA-library directed against HIV-1 with a live cell selection procedure yielded non-toxic and highly efficient HIV-1 specific inhibitory sequences that could serve as valuable candidates for gene therapy studies

    Immuno-chemotherapy reduces recurrence of malignant pleural mesothelioma: an experimental setting

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    Objective: To assess the effect of immuno-chemotherapy on the extent of local tumour recurrence in an established rat model of malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM). Methods: Six days after subpleural inoculation of a syngeneic MPM cell line Interleukin-45 (IL-45), left-sided pneumonectomy and resection of the tumour nodule was performed. Animals were randomised into four treatment groups for intrapleural therapy: control (n=6), 500μg cytosine phosphate guanosine oligodeoxynucleotide (CpG-ODN) (n=6), cisplatin-fibrin (n=6), cisplatin-fibrin+500μg CpG (n=6). Six days later the volume of tumour recurrence was assessed, which was the primary endpoint. Secondary endpoints were quantification of the ratio host/tumour cells in the local recurrence and cytokine expression profile in the tumour tissue by real time quantitative PCR (qPCR). T lymphocyte subpopulations in the tumour recurrence tissue were evaluated by immunohistochemistry. Treatment-related toxicity was monitored by measuring blood chemistry and complete blood count. Results: The volume of tumour recurrence was significantly reduced from 610mm3 in the control group to 11.7mm3 in the cisplatin-fibrin group (p=0.004) and to 21.8mm3 in the cisplatin-fibrin+CpG group (p=0.004). Pro-inflammatory cytokines (Interferon-γ (IFN-γ), Interleukin-6 (IL-6), Interleukin-12 (IL-12)) were increased after treatment with cisplatin-fibrin+CpG in comparison to cisplatin-fibrin alone but differences were not statistically significant. We found a higher ratio of host/tumour cells in the cisplatin-fibrin+CpG group (45/55%) compared to the cisplatin-fibrin group (27/73%). In comparison to the control group, animals treated with cisplatin-fibrin+CpG showed a higher number of CD8+ T-cells in the tumour tissue. No significant treatment-related toxicity was observed. Conclusions: Adjuvant treatment with chemotherapy or immuno-chemotherapy leads to significant reduction of mesothelioma recurrence after surgery in this rat MPM model. Immuno-chemotherapy resulted in an increased recruitment of inflammatory cells to the site of tumourigenesis and elicited higher level of tumour growth inhibiting cytokine

    Broad-Range 16S rRNA Gene Polymerase Chain Reaction for Diagnosis of Culture-Negative Bacterial Infections

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    This study defines the role of 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for diagnosis of culture-negative bacterial infections. Our data show that 16S rRNA PCR is particularly valuable for identification of pathogens in patients pretreated with antibiotic

    Inadequate Clearance of Translocated Bacterial Products in HIV-Infected Humanized Mice

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    Bacterial translocation from the gut and subsequent immune activation are hallmarks of HIV infection and are thought to determine disease progression. Intestinal barrier integrity is impaired early in acute retroviral infection, but levels of plasma lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a marker of bacterial translocation, increase only later. We examined humanized mice infected with HIV to determine if disruption of the intestinal barrier alone is responsible for elevated levels of LPS and if bacterial translocation increases immune activation. Treating uninfected mice with dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) induced bacterial translocation, but did not result in elevated plasma LPS levels. DSS-induced translocation provoked LPS elevation only when phagocytic cells were depleted with clodronate liposomes (clodrolip). Macrophages of DSS-treated, HIV-negative mice phagocytosed more LPS ex vivo than those of control mice. In HIV-infected mice, however, LPS phagocytosis was insufficient to clear the translocated LPS. These conditions allowed higher levels of plasma LPS and CD8+ cell activation, which were associated with lower CD4+/CD8+ cell ratios and higher viral loads. LPS levels reflect both intestinal barrier and LPS clearance. Macrophages are essential in controlling systemic bacterial translocation, and this function might be hindered in chronic HIV infection

    Low postseroconversion CD4 count and rapid decrease of CD4 density identify HIV+ fast progressors

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    CD4 expression in HIV replication is paradoxical: HIV entry requires high cell-surface CD4 densities, but replication requires CD4 down-modulation. However, is CD4 density in HIV+ patients affected over time? Do changes in CD4 density correlate with disease progression? Here, we examined the role of CD4 density for HIV disease progression by longitudinally quantifying CD4 densities on CD4+ T cells and monocytes of ART-naive HIV+ patients with different disease progression rates. This was a retrospective study. We defined three groups of HIV+ patients by their rate of CD4+ T cell loss, calculated by the time between infection and reaching a CD4 level of 200 cells/microl: fast (12 years). Mathematical modeling permitted us to determine the maximum CD4+ T cell count after HIV seroconversion (defined as "postseroconversion CD4 count") and longitudinal profiles of CD4 count and density. CD4 densities were quantified on CD4+ T cells and monocytes from these patients and from healthy individuals by flow cytometry. Fast progressors had significantly lower postseroconversion CD4 counts than other progressors. CD4 density on T cells was lower in HIV+ patients than in healthy individuals and decreased more rapidly in fast than in slow progressors. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) did not normalize CD4 density. Thus, postseroconversion CD4 counts define individual HIV disease progression rates that may help to identify patients who might benefit most from early ART. Early discrimination of slow and fast progressors suggests that critical events during primary infection define long-term outcome. A more rapid CD4 density decrease in fast progressors might contribute to progressive functional impairments of the immune response in advanced HIV infection. The lack of an effect of ART on CD4 density implies a persistent dysfunctional immune response by uncontrolled HIV infection

    Resistance Mutations to Zidovudine and Saquinavir in Patients Receiving Zidovudine plus Saquinavir or Zidovudine and Zalcitabine plus Saquinavir in AIDS Clinical Trials Group 229

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    The relationships among treatment regimens, plasma human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) RNA levels, and resistance mutations to saquinavir (codons 48 and 90) and zidovudine (codon 215) were examined in a cohort of 144 patients from the AIDS Clinical Trials Group 229 study. After 24-40 weeks of therapy, no patients who had received the two-drug combination (zidovudine plus saquinavir) had only codon 48 mutations, 45.8% had only codon 90 mutations, and 8.3% had both codon 48 and 90 mutations. Mutations developed by patients who had received the three-drug combination (zidovudine and zalcitabine plus saquinavir) were codon 48 alone in 1.4%, codon 90 alone in 33.3%, and both codons 48 and 90 in 4.2%. The difference between the groups showed a trend toward reduced mutations with three versus two drugs but did not reach significance (p = .11, two-sided χ2). Higher baseline HIV RNA levels correlated with the development of protease mutations. Mutations at codon 215 were present in 82% of all patients at baseline and in 87% after therap

    Fetal-Maternal Surgery for Spina Bifida in a HIV-Infected Mother

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    Introduction: In select cases, in utero surgery for myelomeningocele (MMC) leads to better outcomes than postnatal repair. However, maternal HIV infection constitutes a formal exclusion criterion due to the potential of vertical HIV transmission. Encouraged by a previous case of a successful fetal spina bifida repair in a Hepatitis Bs antigen-positive woman, a plan was devised allowing for fetal surgery. Case report: In utero MMC repair was performed although the mother was HIV-infected. To minimize the risk of in utero HIV transmission, the mother was treated by highly active antiretroviral therapy throughout gestation as well as intravenous zi-dovudine administration during maternal-fetal surgery. The mother tolerated all procedures very well without any sequelae. The currently 20 month-old toddler is HIV negative and has significantly benefitted from fetal surgery. Discussion/conclusion: This case shows that maternal HIV is not a priori a diagnosis that excludes fetal surgery. Rather, it might be a surrogate for moving towards personalized medicine and away from applying too rigorous exclusion criteria in the selection of candidates for maternal-fetal surgery. Keywords: HIV; Maternal-fetal surgery; Myelomeningocele; Post-exposure prophylaxis; Zidovudin
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