Reduced inflammation and lymphoid tissue immunopathology in rhesus macaques receiving anti-tumor necrosis factor treatment during primary simian immunodeficiency virus infection

在原发性猿猴免疫缺陷病毒感染期间接受抗肿瘤坏死因子治疗的恒河猴的炎症和淋巴组织免疫病理学减少

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作者:Brian Tabb, David R Morcock, Charles M Trubey, Octavio A Quiñones, Xing Pei Hao, Jeremy Smedley, Rhonda Macallister, Michael Piatak Jr, Levelle D Harris, Mirko Paiardini, Guido Silvestri, Jason M Brenchley, W Gregory Alvord, Jeffrey D Lifson, Jacob D Estes

Background

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections induce robust, generalized inflammatory responses that begin during acute infection and lead to pathological systemic immune activation, fibrotic damage of lymphoid tissues, and CD4⁺ T-cell loss, pathogenic processes that contribute to disease progression.

Conclusions

While HIV/SIV replication drives pathogenesis, these data emphasize the contribution of the inflammatory response to lentiviral infection to overall pathogenesis, and they suggest that early modulation of the inflammatory response may help attenuate disease progression.

Methods

To better understand the contribution of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a key regulator of acute inflammation, to lentiviral pathogenesis, rhesus macaques newly infected with SIVmac239 were treated for 12 weeks in a pilot study with adalimumab (Humira), a human anti-TNF monoclonal antibody.

Results

Adalimumab did not affect plasma SIV RNA levels or measures of T-cell immune activation (CD38 or Ki67) in peripheral blood or lymph node T cells. However, compared with untreated rhesus macaques, adalimumab-treated rhesus macaques showed attenuated expression of proinflammatory genes, decreased infiltration of polymorphonuclear cells into the T-cell zone of lymphoid tissues, and weaker antiinflammatory regulatory responses to SIV infection (ie, fewer presumed alternatively activated [ie, CD163⁺] macrophages, interleukin 10-producing cells, and transforming growth factor β-producing cells), along with reduced lymphoid tissue fibrosis and better preservation of CD4⁺ T cells. Conclusions: While HIV/SIV replication drives pathogenesis, these data emphasize the contribution of the inflammatory response to lentiviral infection to overall pathogenesis, and they suggest that early modulation of the inflammatory response may help attenuate disease progression.

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