| Literature DB >> 25528160 |
A W Wahid Ansari1, Reinhold E Schmidt, Esaki M Shankar, Adeeba Kamarulzaman.
Abstract
Even in the era of successful combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), co-infection of Hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains one of the leading causes of non-AIDS-related mortality and morbidity among HIV-positive individuals as a consequence of accelerated liver fibrosis and end-stage liver disease (ESLD). The perturbed liver microenvironment and induction of host pro-inflammatory mediators in response to HIV and HCV infections, play a pivotal role in orchestrating the disease pathogenesis and clinical outcomes. How these viruses communicate each other via chemokine CCL2 and exploit the liver specific cellular environment to exacerbate liver fibrosis in HIV/HCV co-infection setting is a topic of intense discussion. Herein, we provide recent views and insights on potential mechanisms of CCL2 mediated immuno-pathogenesis, and HIV-HCV cross-talk in driving liver inflammation. We believe CCL2 may potentially serve an attractive target of anti-fibrotic intervention against HIV/HCV co-infection associated co-morbidities.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25528160 PMCID: PMC4272802 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-014-0341-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Adverse effects of HIV on HCV replication and liver fibrosis. HIV-associated systemic immune dysfunction and microbial translocation are the critical factors that drive HCV replication and fibrosis in HIV/HCV co-infected individuals. Depletion of CD4+T cells in conjunction with Th17 cells causes microbial translocation that dispenses their products in the blood circulation. Activation of Kupffer cells via TLR4 produces numerous fibrotic mediators including TGF-β, TIMP-1 and type-1 collagen. Taken together both systemic immune dysfunction and microbial translocation contribute to enhanced HCV replication and liver fibrosis.
Figure 2CCL2-mediated synergistic effects of HIV/HCV co-infection on liver fibrosis. Proposed model explains migration of HIV into the liver to infect or activate Kupffer cells, hepatocytes and HSCs directly or indirectly via ROS and TGF-β, to create CCL2 rich inflammatory milieu. CCL2 may act on HSC in a positive feed-back loop manner to accelerate fibrosis via myofibroblast and collagen synthesis. Elevated CCL2 in the liver could also recruit HIV permissive CD4+ T cells and monocytes into the liver for next round of virus replication in a positive feed-back loop manner. This leads to persistence of a high HIV viremia. In addition, elevated CCL2 can polarize helper T cells (Th0) cells into IL-4 and IL-10 secreting Th2 phenotype, a strong determinant HIV disease progression. Further, CCL2 can induce CD4+ T cells to express higher levels of CXCR4, an HIV co-receptor. Overall this scheme depicts how a complex cellular interactions and virus cross-talks via CCL2 can potentially drive hepatic fibrosis HIV replication in HIV/HCV co-infection scenario.