| Literature DB >> 33912183 |
Stéphane Isnard1,2,3, John Lin1,2, Simeng Bu1,2, Brandon Fombuena1,2, Léna Royston1,2, Jean-Pierre Routy1,2,4.
Abstract
The intestinal epithelial layer serves as a physical and functional barrier between the microbiota in the lumen and immunologically active submucosa. Th17 T-cell function protects the gut epithelium from aggression from microbes and their by-products. Loss of barrier function has been associated with enhanced translocation of microbial products which act as endotoxins, leading to local and systemic immune activation. Whereas the inflammatory role of LPS produced by Gram-negative bacteria has been extensively studied, the role of fungal products such as β-D-glucan remains only partially understood. As HIV infection is characterized by impaired gut Th17 function and increased gut permeability, we critically review mechanisms of immune activation related to fungal translocation in this viral infection. Additionally, we discuss markers of fungal translocation for diagnosis and monitoring of experimental treatment responses. Targeting gut barrier dysfunction and reducing fungal translocation are emerging strategies for the prevention and treatment of HIV-associated inflammation and may prove useful in other inflammatory chronic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; beta-D-glucan [BDG]; fungi; immune activation; inflammation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912183 PMCID: PMC8071945 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.656414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Main studies assessing the influence of fungal translocation in people living with HIV.
| Country | Sample size | Population | Study design | Main findings | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | USA | 132 | CHI, mostly ART+ | Cross sectional | Higher BDG values associated with inflammation, CD8 T-cell activation, and pulmonary abnormalities. | ( |
| 2015 | USA | 41 | CHI ART+ | Cross sectional | Blood BDG levels correlated with neopterin levels and tended to correlate with TNF-α levels. | ( |
| 2016 | USA | 11 | Early infection, before and after ART | Cross sectional | Blood BDG and sCD14 levels were associated with lower colonization of | ( |
| 2016 | USA | 21 | CHI ART+ | Cross sectional | Higher blood BDG levels were associated with neurocognitive dysfunction. | ( |
| 2018 | USA | 451 | Before and after ART | Cross sectional | suPAR and BDG plasma levels after ART initiation were associated with increased risk of non-AIDS comorbidities. | ( |
| 2019 | Canada | 146 | Early and chronic, ART naïve or ART+ | Longitudinal Cross sectional | Plasma BDG levels were higher in chronically infected people than early infection, and were associated with inflammation and immune activation. | ( |
| 2019 | USA | 231 | ART naïve before and after ART, comparison of TDF/FTC, ATV +DRV, or RAL | Longitudinal | BDG increased after ART initiation, in association with increase in body fat. | ( |
| 2019 | USA | 61 | CHI ART+ | Cross sectional | BDG levels in plasma were associated with neurocognitive function. | ( |
| 2019 | USA | 176 | CHI ART+ and uninfected controls | Cross sectional | Lower levels of BDG in HIV+ participants compared to uninfected controls. BDG levels correlated with levels of inflammation markers in HIV+ participants. No difference in levels of anti-fungal antibodies were found. | ( |
| 2020 | USA | 14 | CHI ART+, compared to people with liver cirrhosis and healthy controls | Longitudinal and cross sectional | Oral challenge with BDG rich food did not increase blood levels of BDG. | ( |
| 2020 | Uganda | 171 | Children (2-10 years old) HIV+ ART+, and uninfected, HIV exposed or not | Cross sectional | Blood BDG levels were higher in HIV infected children. In children with a history of breastfeeding, BDG levels correlated with soluble TNF receptor levels. | ( |
| 2020 | Uganda | 101 | Children (10-18 years old) HIV+ ART+, and uninfected, HIV exposed or not | Cross sectional | Blood BDG levels were higher in HIV infected children. BDG levels were associated with immune activation in monocytes and T-cells. | ( |
| 2020 | Canada | 11 | CHI ART+ | Longitudinal | 24 hours follow-up of participant showed no significant variations of BDG levels in blood. | ( |
| 2021 | The Netherlands | 40 | CHI ART+ and uninfected controls | Cross-sectional | A higher proportion of ART-treated PLWH had detectable BDG levels in blood, and those levels were associated with inflammatory markers. | ( |
| 2021 | Canada | 145 | CHI ART+ and uninfected control | Cross-sectional | BDG levels were associated with subclinical coronary atherosclerosis plaque in PLWH but not uninfected controls. | ( |
CHI, chronic HIV infection; ART, antiretroviral therapy; TDF, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; FTC, emtricitabine; ATV, atazanavir; DRV, darunavir; RAL, raltegravir.
Figure 1Influence of β-D-Glucan in people living with HIV. In the gut lumen, Saccharomyces Cerevisiae and Candida albicans are largely present in the microbiota. Upon HIV-associated epithelial gut damage, fungal products such as β-D-Glucan (BDG) translocate in the mucosa. BDG is recognized by immune cells through Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR-2), Dectin-1, complement receptor 3 (CR3) or NKp30, activating immune cells and inducing inflammation. Persisting inflammation has been associated with disease progression in people living with HIV (PLWH) not taking antiretroviral therapy (ART), and with increased risk of non-AIDS comorbidities in ART-treated PLWH.