To examine the protective role of cellular immunity in the vertical transmission of HIV, we analyzed HIV-specific IL-2 and CTL responses, as well as β-chemokine expression in HIV-infected and uninfected infants of HIV+ mothers. Our results showed that HIV envelope (env) peptide-specific IL-2 responses associated with β-chemokine production were detectable at birth in the majority of uninfected infants of HIV+ mothers. The responses falling to background before the infants were 1 yr old were rarely associated with HIV-specific CTL activity. Conversely, HIV-specific Th and CTL cellular responses were absent at birth in HIV-infected infants. Infants with AIDS-related symptoms exhibited undetectable or very low levels of HIV-specific cellular immunity during the first year of life, whereas those with a slowly progressive disease showed evidence of such immunity between their second and ninth month. The latter group of infected infants tested negative for plasma HIV RNA levels shortly after birth, suggesting lack of intrauterine exposure to HIV. The presence of HIV-specific Th responses at birth in uninfected newborns of HIV+ mothers, but absence of such activities in HIV-infected infants without evidence of intrauterine HIV infection, suggests that in utero development of HIV-specific Th responses associated with β-chemokines could mediate nonlytic inhibition of infection during vertical transmission of HIV.
CITATION STYLE
Wasik, T. J., Bratosiewicz, J., Wierzbicki, A., Whiteman, V. E., Rutstein, R. R., Starr, S. E., … Kozbor, D. (1999). Protective Role of β-Chemokines Associated with HIV-Specific Th Responses Against Perinatal HIV Transmission. The Journal of Immunology, 162(7), 4355–4364. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.7.4355
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