Monocytes modulate enhancement of HIV-1 replication by Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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Abstract

To investigate the effects of Mycobacterium tuberculosis on HIV-1 replication, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of bacille Calmette- Guerin (BCG)-vaccinated donors and non-BCG-vaccinated donors were infected in vitro with a lymphotropic isolate of HIV-1 and cultured in the presence of purified protein derivative (PPD). Addition of PPD resulted in enhanced HIV- 1 replication and lymphoproliferation in BCG-vaccinated donor PBMC, while PPD had no such effects in control PBMC. HIV-1 replication increased even more when monocytes were removed from PBMC, while lymphoproliferation was decreased. High percentages of monocytes were associated with a decreased HIV-1 replication and proliferation that could not be reversed by addition of antibodies against the cytokines IL-1, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF- β) or indomethacin. PPD stimulates PBMC to release IL-10, a cytokine known to down-regulate proliferation and HIV-1 replication. PPD-induced effects on proliferation as well as HIV-1 replication could be partially blocked by adding a monoclonal antibody against MHC class II molecules, suggesting that part of the mechanism of PPD-induced enhancement is T memory cell activation.

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De Haas, C. J. C., De Vos, N. M., Visser, M. R., Snippe, H., & Verhoef, J. (1998). Monocytes modulate enhancement of HIV-1 replication by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 111(2), 286–292. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2249.1998.00494.x

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