153 research outputs found
Immune Pathogenesis of Asymptomatic Chlamydia trachomatis Infections in the Female Genital Tract
Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infections of the female genital tract, although frequently asymptomatic, are a major cause of fallopian-tube occlusion and infertility. Early stage pregnancy loss may also be due to an unsuspected and undetected CT infection. In vitro and in vivo studies have demonstrated that this organism can persist in the female genital tract in a form undetectable by culture. The mechanism of tubal damage as well as the rejection of an embryo may involve an initial immune sensitization to the CT 60 kD heat shock protein (HSP), followed by a reactivation of HSP-sensitized lymphocytes in response to the human HSP and the subsequent release of inflammatory cytokines. The periodic induction of human HSP expression by various microorganisms or by noninfectious mechanisms in the fallopian tubes of women sensitized to the CT HSP may eventually result in tubal scarring and occlusion. Similarly, an immune response to human HSP
expression during the early stages of pregnancy may interfere with the immune regulatory mechanisms required for the maintenance of a semiallogeneic embryo
Detection of Ureaplasma urealyticum in Second-Trimester Amniotic Fluid by Polymerase Chain Reaction Correlates with Subsequent Preterm Labor and Delivery
Ureaplasma urealyticum is the microorganism most frequently isolated from the amniotic fluid of women in preterm labor. The relationship between intra-amniotic U. urealyticum in healthy second-trimester pregnant women and subsequent pregnancy outcome was investigated. Transabdominal amniotic fluid obtained from 254 asymptomatic women at 15-17 weeks' gestation were tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). U. urealyticum was identified in 29 subjects (11.4%). A subsequent preterm labor occurred in 17 U. urealyticum-positive women (58.6%), compared with 10 (4.4%) U. urealyticum-negative women (P<.0001). Preterm birth was documented in 7 (24.1%) U. urealyticum-positive women compared with only 1 U. urealyticum-negative woman (0.4%) (P<.0001). U. urealyticum-positive women also had a higher prevalence of preterm labor in a prior pregnancy (20.7%) than did the negative women (2.7%; P=.0008). PCR testing of second-trimester amniotic fluid for U. urealyticum can identify women at risk for subsequent preterm labor and deliver
Pregnancy Outcome Following Pelvic Infection
To determine whether a previous pelvic infection has an effect on the outcome of a subsequent
pregnancy, we identified women with a diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), amnionitis,
and postpartum or postabortal endometritis-salpingitis by a retrospective chart review of all patients
admitted to the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at The New York Hospital-Cornell
Medical Center between 1975 and 1977 and between 1985 and 1988. Antimicrobial regimens
effective against Chlamydia trachomatis were initiated in 1985. Controls were randomly selected
patients presenting during the same time period for routine examinations who had normal Pap
smears and no infections. Both groups were comparable for age, race, gravity, and parity. Differences
were evaluated by chi square analysis, using the Yates correction factor. We identified 183
women with a history of the above infections who subsequently conceived, and 82 controls. There
were no differences in outcome between the two index groups. Term vaginal deliveries occurred in
14.2% of the women with a prior pelvic infection and in 56% of the controls (P < 0.001). Among the
97 women who had had PID, 21 (21.6%) had a spontaneous abortion in the subsequent pregnancy,
as opposed to 6 (7.3%) of the controls (P = 0.013). In addition, eight of the women with PID (but no
controls) went into preterm labor (P = 0.021). An increased incidence of preterm labor (P = 0.001)
was also observed in women with a history of amnionitis. A history of endometritis was not
associated with an increased prevalence of abnormal outcome in subsequent pregnancies. PID and
amnionitis may adversely affect the outcome of subsequent pregnancies
Immune Recognition of the 60kD Heat Shock Protein: Implications for Subsequent Fertility
The 60kD heat shock protein (hsp60) is a highly conserved protein and a dominant antigen of
most pathogenic bacteria. In some women, chronic or repeated upper genital tract infections with
Chlamydia trachomatis, and possibly with other microorganisms, induces immune sensitization to
epitopes of hsp60 that are present in both the microbial and human hsp60. Once a woman becomes
sensitized to these conserved epitpes, any subsequent induction of human or bacterial hsp60
expression will reactivate hsp60-sensitized lymphocytes and initiate a pro-inflammatory immune
response. Hsp60 is expressed during the early stages of pregnancy, by both the embryo and the
maternal decidua. We examined, therefore, whether women who were sensitized to hsp60 experienced
less successful pregnancy outcomes compared to women who were not sensitized to this
antigen. In women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF), the presence of cervical IgA antibodies
reactive with the C. trachomatis hsp60 correlated with implantation failure after embryo transfer.
Further analysis revealed that an immunodominant epitope for these IgA antibodies was an hsp60
epitope shared between C. trachomatis and man. In subsequent studies of women not undergoing
IVF, cervical IgA antibodies to the human hsp60 were identified in 13 of 91 reproductive age
women. This antibody was most prevalent in those women with a history of primary infertility
(p = 0.003). In addition, cervical anti-hsp60 IgA correlated with the detection of the pro-inflammatory
cytokines interferon-γ (p = 0.001) and tumor necrosis factor-α (p = 0.02) in the cervix.
Conversely, women with proven fertility had the highest prevalence of the anti-inflammatory cytokine,
interleukin 10, in their cervices (p = 0.001). In an analysis of serum samples in a third study,
women with a history of two or more consecutive first trimester spontaneous abortions had a higher
prevalence (p = 0.01) of IgG antibodies to the human hsp60 (36.8%) than did age matched fertile
women (11.1%) or women with primary infertility (11.8%). Immune sensitization to epitopes expressed
by the human hsp60 may reduce the probability of a successful pregnancy outcome due to
reactivation of hsp60-reactive lymphocytes, induction of a pro-inflammatory cytokine response and
interference with early embryo development and/or implantation
Vulvar Vestibulitis—A Complex Clinical Entity
Objective: This study aims to determine the pathophysiology of vulvar vestibulitis and to evaluate
currently used treatment options
Immune Regulation in the Male Genital Tract
Spermatozoa are not produced until puberty, long after the establishment of tolerance to self-antigens.
Therefore, sperm-specific antigens are immunogenic in men. Most men, however, do not
produce antibodies to their own gametes. Development of mechanisms to prevent or limit autoimmune
responses to spermatozoa were essential for preservation of reproductive capacity. Tight
junctions between adjacent Sertoli cells, as part of the blood-testis barrier, prevent sperm-immune
cell contact. In some portions of the genital tract this barrier is thin or incomplete. Immune mechanisms
have evolved to actively suppress the autoimmune response to spermatozoa within the genital
tract. Unlike in the circulation where CD4+ helper T lymphocytes predominate, CD8+ suppressor/cytotoxic T lymphocytes are the most prominant T cells in the epididymis and vas deferens.
In addition, spermatozoa suppress pro-inflammatory lymphocyte immune responses, possibly by inducing
production of anti-inflammatory cytokines. Antisperm antibody production is induced in the
male genital tract when a local infection or disruption in the genital tract physical barrier leads to
an influx of CD4+ T cells. In response to induction of a productive immune response, two additional
mechanisms downregulate humoral immunity within the genital tract. T lymphocytes possessing
the γσ form of the antigen receptor (γσ T cells) are concentrated in the male genital tract and in
semen. These cells become activated and proliferate in men with evidence of sperm autoimmunity.
Activated γσ T cells inhibit production of antibodies by activated B lymphocytes, thereby limiting
antisperm antibody production. Heat shock proteins (hsps) are also present in semen in association
with infection and antisperm antibody formation. Hsp gene transcription leads to inhibition of
transcription of the genes coding for pro-inflammatory cytokines and, conversely, to activation of
γσ T cells. Activated γσ T cells also promote hsp synthesis. The mechanisms to inhibit immunity
to sperm may hinder effective immune elimination of microoganisms in the male genital
tract
Relation between recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, vaginal concentrations of mannose-binding lectin, and a mannose-binding lectin gene polymorphism in latvian women
Funding Information: Financial support: FIGO/Schering Research Foundation Fellowship (O.B.).Vaginal concentrations of mannose-binding lectin (MBL) and possession of a polymorphism in codon 54 of the MBL gene were determined in 42 women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC) and 43 control subjects. Reduced vaginal MBL levels and an increased occurrence of the polymorphism were present in women with RVVC.Peer reviewe
Frequency of interleukin-4 (IL-4) -589 gene polymorphism and vaginal concentrations of IL-4, nitric oxide, and mannose-binding lectin in women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis
Background. A C→T substitution at position -589 in the interleukin-4 (IL-4) gene is associated with increased production of IL-4. Associations between this polymorphism and recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), as well as vaginal concentrations of IL-4 and the anticandidal compounds nitric oxide (NO) and mannose binding lectin (MBL), were evaluated. Methods. Vaginal samples obtained by lavage from 42 women with RVVC during the acute stage of the disease and 43 control samples were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for IL-4 and NO metabolites. The -589 IL-4 gene polymorphism was detected by polymerase chain reaction and endonuclease digestion. Data were analyzed by Fisher's exact test, the nonparametric Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests, and Spearman rank correlation. P < .05 was considered significant. Results. Candida albicans was identified in 38 patients with RVVC; 3 others had infection due to Candida tropicalis, and 1 had infection due to Candida krusei. The IL-4 T,T genotype was detected in 59.5% of patients with RVVC and in 7.0% of control subjects (P < .0001). The frequency of IL-4*T was 76.2% in patients with RVVC and 23.3% in control subjects (P < .0001). The median concentration of vaginal IL-4 was elevated in patients with RVVC, compared with control subjects (P < .0001). Conversely, vaginal concentrations of NO metabolites (P = .02) and MBL (P < .0001) were reduced in patients with RVVC. There was a positive association between IL-4*T homozygosity and vaginal IL-4 levels (P < .0001) and negative associations between this genotype and vaginal NO (P = .01) and MBL (P < .0001) concentrations. Conclusions. Reduced vaginal levels of anticandidal factors in IL-4*T homozygotes may increase susceptibility to RVVC.Peer reviewe
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