B cell activation during HIV-1 infection. II. Cell-to-cell interactions and cytokine requirement
Article 1991 en
Authors
AA
A. Amadori
RZ
Rita Zamarchi
MV
M L Veronese
Abstract
1 min read
This study examined the mechanisms underlying the intense activation of HIV-1-specific B cells observed in peripheral blood of HIV-1-infected subjects. Spontaneous in vitro synthesis of anti-HIV-1 antibodies, as well as total Ig production, were dramatically reduced by accessory cell, but not T cell removal. This fall was counteracted by addition of rIL-6, but not other cytokines, to monocyte-depleted cultures; moreover, antisera against IL-6 suppressed spontaneous anti-HIV-1 antibody synthesis in a dose-dependent manner. Although IL-6 apparently sustained HIV-1-specific B cell activation, no increase in serum IL-6 levels was observed; PBMC from seropositive subjects did not produce increased amounts of IL-6 in vitro, compared to seronegative controls, both spontaneously and in the presence of LPS stimulation; finally, no constitutive expression of IL-6 gene could be documented in freshly isolated PBMC. These findings indicate that IL-6 may play a central role in HIV-1-specific B cell activation in seropositive patients, and further stress the importance of this cytokine during HIV-1 infection.
Annemarie E. Brouwer, Praprit Teparrukkul, Adul Rajanuwong, Wirongrong Chierakul, Weera Mahavanakul, Wasun Chantratita, Sir Nicholas White, Thomas S. Harrison
JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.