| Literature DB >> 27214135 |
Rúbia M de Medeiros1,2, Jacqueline M Valverde-Villegas1,2, Dennis M Junqueira1,3, Tiago Gräf1,4, Juliana D Lindenau2, Marineide G de Mello5, Priscila Vianna2, Sabrina E M Almeida1,2, Jose Artur B Chies2.
Abstract
Cytokines are intrinsically related to disease progression in HIV infection. We evaluated the plasma levels of Th1/Th2/Th17 cytokines in extreme progressors, including slow (SPs) and rapid (RPs) progressors, who were thus classified based on clinical and laboratory follow-up covering a period of time before the initiation of HAART, ranging from 93-136.5 months for SPs and 7.5-16.5 months for RPs. Analyses were also performed based on the different stages of HIV infection (chronic, pre-HAART individuals-subjects sampled before initiating HAART but who initiated therapy from 12 to 24 months-and those receiving HAART). The plasma cytokine levels of 16 HIV-infected rapid progressors and 25 slow progressors were measured using a Human Th1/Th2/Th17 CBA kit. The IL-6 and IL-10 plasma levels differed significantly between the stages of HIV infection. The IL-6 levels were higher in slow progressors pre-HAART than in chronically infected SPs and HIV-seronegative individuals. The IL-10 levels were higher in slow progressors pre-HAART than in slow progressors receiving HAART and HIV-seronegative controls, and in rapid progressors, the IL-10 levels were higher in pre-HAART subjects than in HIV-seronegative controls. The results reflect the changes in the cytokine profile occurring during different clinical stages in HIV+ subjects. Our results suggest an association between increased IL-6 and IL-10 levels and pre-HAART stages independent of the slow or rapid progression status of the subjects. Thus, increased IL-6 and IL-10 levels could indicate a global inflammatory status and could be used as markers of the disease course in HIV-infected individuals.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27214135 PMCID: PMC4877004 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical baselines and demographic characteristics of the 41 HIV-infected subjects enrolled in this study as rapid or slow disease progressors.
| No. of subjects | ||
|---|---|---|
| RP (n16) | SP (n25) | |
| 01 (1–3) | 11 (10–13) | |
| 487 (356–600) | 553 (392–712) | |
| 3.32 (1.84–4.25) | 2.2 (1.79–3.96) | |
| 13.5 (7.5–16.5) | 111 (93–136.5) | |
| -0.66 (-1.28, -0.27) | 0.40 (0.22, 0.54) | |
| 4.28 (3.8–4.79) | 3.73 (3.23–4.10) | |
| 38 (32–50) | 42 (35–48) | |
| Female | 12 (0.75) | 22 (0.88) |
| Male | 4 (0.25) | 3 (0.12) |
RP rapid progressor; SP slow progressor
amedian (IQ), years;
bmedian (IQ), cells/mm3;
cmedian (IQ), log10 copies/mL;
dmedian (IQ), months;
eestimated for data pre-HAART.
Fig 1Flowchart of the sampling procedure.
Fig 2Plasma cytokine levels in rapid and slow progressors subgrouped according to clinical stage.
Plasma levels of the cytokines IL-2, IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-6, TNF-α, IL-17A and IL-10 in rapid (green) and slow (blue) progressors grouped by different stages of HIV infection and in HIV-seronegative controls (red). A Kruskal Wallis test showed significant differences between the IL-6 levels for chronically infectedvs pre-HAART SPs (p = 0.001) and pre-HAART SPsvs HIV-seronegative individuals (p = 0.01). In addition, significant differences were observed in the IL-10 levels between pre-HAART SPsvs SPs receiving HAART (p = 0.04); pre-HAART SPsvs HIV-seronegative individuals (p = 0.02); and pre-HAART RPsvs HIV-seronegative individuals (p = 0.01). After FDR, significant differences were maintained for the IL-6 levels in chronically infectedvs pre-HAART SPs (p = 0.03) and the IL-10 levels in pre-HAART RPsvs HIV-seronegative individuals (p = 0.01).
IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, IFN-γ and IL-17A plasma levels in HIV-seronegative control and HIV-seropositive individuals grouped by different clinical stages of HIV infection.
| Group and clinic stage (n) | Female sex | Median age | CD4+ T-cell sampling | VL log sampling | IL2 | IL4 | IL6 | IL10 | TNF | INF | IL17 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 35 | --- | --- | 0.82 | (0.02) | 0.95 | (0.03) | (0.19) | (0.03) | 1.70 | (0.05) | 1.66 | (0.04) | 3.32 | (0.12) | |||
| 9 | 40 | 802 (560–1047) | 3.49 (2.0–3.9) | 0.83 | (0.03) | 0.96 | (0.04) | (0.28) | 1.51 | (0.05) | 1.67 | (0.07) | 1.68 | (0.05) | 3.34 | (0.13) | ||
| 6 | 41 | 496 (375–630) | 4.25 (3.6–4.5) | 0.85 | (0.10) | 1.01 | (0.16) | (0.53) | (1.12) | 1.72 | (1.12) | 1.71 | (0.20) | 3.53 | (0.59) | |||
| 7 | 42 | 601 (370–936) | 1.69 | 0.81 | (0.04) | 0.96 | (0.03) | 2.30 | (0.27) | (0.11) | 1.65 | (0.05) | 1.65 | (0.07) | 3.35 | (0.12) | ||
| 6 | 36 | 316 (197–387) | 4.09 (3.8–4.5) | 0.79 | (0.05) | 1.00 | (0.08) | 2.35 | (0.39) | (0.37) | 1.67 | (0.08) | 1.60 | (0.09) | 3.48 | (0.28) | ||
| 6 | 35 | 730 (512–858) | 1.69 | 0.82 | (0.02) | 0.99 | (0.07) | 2.26 | (0.17) | 1.50 | (0.07) | 1.69 | (0.05) | 1.66 | (0.04) | 3.46 | (0.26) | |
Mean (Std. Error).
Kruskal Wallis test:
a SPs chronic vs SPs pre-HAART (p = 0.001);
b SPs pre-HAART vs SPs under-HAART (p = 0.04);
c SPs pre-HAART vs HIV-seronegative (p = 0.01);
d SPs pre-HAART vs HIV-seronegative (p = 0.02);
e RPs pre-HAART vs HIV-seronegative (p = 0.01).
After FDR, significant differences were IL-6 levels in SP chronic vs SP pre-HAART (p = 0.03) and IL-10 levels in RP pre-HAART vs HIV-seronegative (p = 0.01).
Fig 3IL-6 and IL-10 plasma levels in slow progressors in a pre-HAART stage.
A significant Spearman correlation, rho = 0.750, was observed between theIL-6 and IL-10 plasma levels in pre-HAART SPs (p = 0.02).