Temporal and anatomic relationship between virus replication and cytokine gene expression after vaginal simian immunodeficiency virus infection

K Abel, DM Rocke, B Chohan, L Fritts… - Journal of virology, 2005 - Am Soc Microbiol
K Abel, DM Rocke, B Chohan, L Fritts, CJ Miller
Journal of virology, 2005Am Soc Microbiol
The current knowledge about early innate immune responses at mucosal sites of human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) entry is limited but likely to be important in the design of
effective HIV vaccines against heterosexual transmission. This study examined the temporal
and anatomic relationship between virus replication, lymphocyte depletion, and cytokine
gene expression levels in mucosal and lymphoid tissues in a vaginal-transmission model of
HIV in rhesus macaques. The results of the study show that the kinetics of cytokine gene …
Abstract
The current knowledge about early innate immune responses at mucosal sites of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) entry is limited but likely to be important in the design of effective HIV vaccines against heterosexual transmission. This study examined the temporal and anatomic relationship between virus replication, lymphocyte depletion, and cytokine gene expression levels in mucosal and lymphoid tissues in a vaginal-transmission model of HIV in rhesus macaques. The results of the study show that the kinetics of cytokine gene expression levels in the acute phase of infection are positively correlated with virus replication in a tissue. Thus, cytokine responses after vaginal simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) inoculation are earliest and strongest in mucosal tissues of the genital tract and lowest in systemic lymphoid tissues. Importantly, the early cytokine response was dominated by the induction of proinflammatory cytokines, while the induction of cytokines with antiviral activity, alpha/beta interferon, occurred too late to prevent virus replication and dissemination. Thus, the early cytokine response favors immune activation, resulting in the recruitment of potential target cells for SIV. Further, unique cytokine gene expression patterns were observed in distinct anatomic locations with a rapid and persistent inflammatory response in the gut that is consistent with the gut being the major site of early CD4 T-cell depletion in SIV infection.
American Society for Microbiology