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HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships

BACKGROUND: HIV exposed seronegative (HESN) women represent the population most in need of a prophylactic antiviral strategy. Mucosal cationic polypeptides can potentially be regulated for this purpose and we here aimed to determine their endogenous expression and HIV neutralizing activity in genita...

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Autores principales: Levinson, Pauline, Choi, Robert Y., Cole, Amy L., Hirbod, Taha, Rhedin, Samuel, Payne, Barbara, Guthrie, Brandon L., Bosire, Rose, Cole, Alexander M., Farquhar, Carey, Broliden, Kristina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3289637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22389677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031996
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author Levinson, Pauline
Choi, Robert Y.
Cole, Amy L.
Hirbod, Taha
Rhedin, Samuel
Payne, Barbara
Guthrie, Brandon L.
Bosire, Rose
Cole, Alexander M.
Farquhar, Carey
Broliden, Kristina
author_facet Levinson, Pauline
Choi, Robert Y.
Cole, Amy L.
Hirbod, Taha
Rhedin, Samuel
Payne, Barbara
Guthrie, Brandon L.
Bosire, Rose
Cole, Alexander M.
Farquhar, Carey
Broliden, Kristina
author_sort Levinson, Pauline
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: HIV exposed seronegative (HESN) women represent the population most in need of a prophylactic antiviral strategy. Mucosal cationic polypeptides can potentially be regulated for this purpose and we here aimed to determine their endogenous expression and HIV neutralizing activity in genital secretions of women at risk of HIV infection. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) of Kenyan women in HIV-serodiscordant relationships (HESN, n = 164; HIV seropositive, n = 60) and low-risk controls (n = 72) were assessed for the cationic polypeptides HNP1–3, LL-37 and SLPI by ELISA and for HIV neutralizing activity by a PBMC-based assay using an HIV primary isolate. Median levels of HNP1–3 and LL-37 in CVS were similar across study groups. Neither HSV-2 serostatus, nor presence of bacterial vaginosis, correlated with levels of HNP1–3 or LL-37 in the HESN women. However, an association with their partner's viral load was observed. High viral load (>10,000 HIV RNA copies/ml plasma) correlated with higher levels of HNP1–3 and LL-37 (p = 0.04 and 0.03, respectively). SLPI was most abundant in the low-risk group and did not correlate with male partner's viral load in the HESN women. HIV neutralizing activity was found in CVS of all study groups. In experimental studies, selective depletion of cationic polypeptides from CVS rendered the remaining CVS fraction non-neutralizing, whereas the cationic polypeptide fraction retained the activity. Furthermore, recombinant HNP1–3 and LL-37 could induce neutralizing activity when added to CVS lacking intrinsic activity. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings show that CVS from HESN, low-risk, and HIV seropositive women contain HIV neutralizing activity. Although several innate immune proteins, including HNP1–3 and LL-37, contribute to this activity these molecules can also have inflammatory properties. This balance is influenced by hormonal and environmental factors and in the present HIV serodiscordant couple cohort study we show that a partner's viral load is associated with levels of such molecules.
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spelling pubmed-32896372012-03-02 HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships Levinson, Pauline Choi, Robert Y. Cole, Amy L. Hirbod, Taha Rhedin, Samuel Payne, Barbara Guthrie, Brandon L. Bosire, Rose Cole, Alexander M. Farquhar, Carey Broliden, Kristina PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: HIV exposed seronegative (HESN) women represent the population most in need of a prophylactic antiviral strategy. Mucosal cationic polypeptides can potentially be regulated for this purpose and we here aimed to determine their endogenous expression and HIV neutralizing activity in genital secretions of women at risk of HIV infection. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) of Kenyan women in HIV-serodiscordant relationships (HESN, n = 164; HIV seropositive, n = 60) and low-risk controls (n = 72) were assessed for the cationic polypeptides HNP1–3, LL-37 and SLPI by ELISA and for HIV neutralizing activity by a PBMC-based assay using an HIV primary isolate. Median levels of HNP1–3 and LL-37 in CVS were similar across study groups. Neither HSV-2 serostatus, nor presence of bacterial vaginosis, correlated with levels of HNP1–3 or LL-37 in the HESN women. However, an association with their partner's viral load was observed. High viral load (>10,000 HIV RNA copies/ml plasma) correlated with higher levels of HNP1–3 and LL-37 (p = 0.04 and 0.03, respectively). SLPI was most abundant in the low-risk group and did not correlate with male partner's viral load in the HESN women. HIV neutralizing activity was found in CVS of all study groups. In experimental studies, selective depletion of cationic polypeptides from CVS rendered the remaining CVS fraction non-neutralizing, whereas the cationic polypeptide fraction retained the activity. Furthermore, recombinant HNP1–3 and LL-37 could induce neutralizing activity when added to CVS lacking intrinsic activity. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings show that CVS from HESN, low-risk, and HIV seropositive women contain HIV neutralizing activity. Although several innate immune proteins, including HNP1–3 and LL-37, contribute to this activity these molecules can also have inflammatory properties. This balance is influenced by hormonal and environmental factors and in the present HIV serodiscordant couple cohort study we show that a partner's viral load is associated with levels of such molecules. Public Library of Science 2012-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3289637/ /pubmed/22389677 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031996 Text en Levinson et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Levinson, Pauline
Choi, Robert Y.
Cole, Amy L.
Hirbod, Taha
Rhedin, Samuel
Payne, Barbara
Guthrie, Brandon L.
Bosire, Rose
Cole, Alexander M.
Farquhar, Carey
Broliden, Kristina
HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title_full HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title_fullStr HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title_full_unstemmed HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title_short HIV-Neutralizing Activity of Cationic Polypeptides in Cervicovaginal Secretions of Women in HIV-Serodiscordant Relationships
title_sort hiv-neutralizing activity of cationic polypeptides in cervicovaginal secretions of women in hiv-serodiscordant relationships
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3289637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22389677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031996
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