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Rupert Kaul, Sarah L. Rowland-Jones, Joshua Kimani, Tao Dong, Hong-Bing Yang, Peter Kiama, Timothy Rostron, Ephantus Njagi, Job J. Bwayo, Kelly S. MacDonald, Andrew J. McMichael, Francis A. Plummer
Published in Volume 107, Issue 3
J Clin Invest. 2001; 107(3):341–349 doi:10.1172/JCI10714
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 2

Association between HIV-1 epitope–specific ELISPOT responses (see text for definition of an HIV-1 epitope–specific response) and levels of sex work in persistently HIV-1–seronegative Kenyan sex workers. HIV-1–specific ELISPOT responses are shown on the y axis as SFU/106 PBMCs. Solid lines represent IFN-γ release in response to HIV-1 CTL peptide epitopes, and the dashed lines represent the IFN-γ response to R10 medium alone. Assay date is shown on the x axis, together with the reported number of daily clients and percentage of condom use. Stopping sex work completely was generally associated with loss of HIV-1–specific ELISPOT responses, demonstrated by ML 1192 (a) and ML 851 (b), although ML 1732 maintained a response for over a year after stopping sex work (c). A temporary break (≥2 months) from sex work was also associated with the loss of HIV-1–specific responses (ML 1437) (d), and responses were detected again 1–12 months after resuming sex work in ML 1250 (e), ML 1749 (f), and ML 851 (before retirement) (b). HIV-1–specific responses tended to be maintained in the absence of a break from sex work, shown by ML 1671 (g) and ML 887 (h).