Cargando…

High levels of T lymphocyte activation in Leishmania-HIV-1 co-infected individuals despite low HIV viral load

BACKGROUND: Concomitant infections may influence HIV progression by causing chronic activation leading to decline in T-cell function. In the Americas, visceral (AVL) and tegumentary leishmaniasis (ATL) have emerged as important opportunistic infections in HIV-AIDS patients and both of those diseases...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Santos-Oliveira, Joanna R, Giacoia-Gripp, Carmem BW, Alexandrino de Oliveira, Priscilla, Amato, Valdir S, Lindoso, Jose Ângelo L, Goto, Hiro, Oliveira-Neto, Manoel P, Mattos, Marise S, Grinsztejn, Beatriz, Morgado, Mariza G, Da-Cruz, Alda M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3022832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21171992
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-10-358
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Concomitant infections may influence HIV progression by causing chronic activation leading to decline in T-cell function. In the Americas, visceral (AVL) and tegumentary leishmaniasis (ATL) have emerged as important opportunistic infections in HIV-AIDS patients and both of those diseases have been implicated as potentially important co-factors in disease progression. We investigated whether leishmaniasis increases lymphocyte activation in HIV-1 co-infected patients. This might contribute to impaired cellular immune function. METHODS: To address this issue we analyzed CD4(+ )T absolute counts and the proportion of CD8(+ )T cells expressing CD38 in Leishmania/HIV co-infected patients that recovered after anti-leishmanial therapy. RESULTS: We found that, despite clinical remission of leishmaniasis, AVL co-infected patients presented a more severe immunossupression as suggested by CD4(+ )T cell counts under 200 cells/mm(3), differing from ATL/HIV-AIDS cases that tends to show higher lymphocytes levels (over 350 cells/mm(3)). Furthermore, five out of nine, AVL/HIV-AIDS presented low CD4(+ )T cell counts in spite of low or undetectable viral load. Expression of CD38 on CD8(+ )T lymphocytes was significantly higher in AVL or ATL/HIV-AIDS cases compared to HIV/AIDS patients without leishmaniasis or healthy subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Leishmania infection can increase the degree of immune system activation in individuals concomitantly infected with HIV. In addition, AVL/HIV-AIDS patients can present low CD4(+ )T cell counts and higher proportion of activated T lymphocytes even when HIV viral load is suppressed under HAART. This fact can cause a misinterpretation of these laboratorial markers in co-infected patients.