Cervical human immunodeficiency virus type 1 shedding is associated with genital β-chemokine secretion

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Abstract

Forty human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected women participated in a cross-sectional study of possible correlations between chemokine receptor (CCR5 and/or CCR2B) genotype, HIV-1 RNA and DNA load, and β-chemokine levels (RANTES, MIP-1α, MIP-1β) in blood and cervix. HIV-1 nucleic acid and β-chemokines were found in all patient blood samples and in more than half of the cervical samples regardless of CCR5 or CCR2B genotype. High β-chemokine concentrations were in general associated with high virus loads in blood and cervix. In the blood, the proviral DNA load was significantly correlated with the MIP-1α concentration, whereas the DNA load in cervix was significantly associated with the MIP-10 concentration. The cervical viral RNA load was significantly associated with levels of all three chemokines. Thus, when HIV-1 shedding was highest in the genital tract, it was associated with other combinations of β-chemokines than virus load in blood, suggesting that local immune reactions strongly influence virus load in the cervical compartment. © 1998 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Iversen, A. K. N. (1998). Cervical human immunodeficiency virus type 1 shedding is associated with genital β-chemokine secretion. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 178(5 SUPPL.), 1334–1342. https://doi.org/10.1086/314433

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