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Cutting Edge: Unusual NK Cell Responses to HIV-1 Peptides Are Associated with Protection against Maternal-Infant Transmission of HIV-11

Authors :
Tiemessen, Caroline T.
Shalekoff, Sharon
Meddows-Taylor, Stephen
Schramm, Diana B.
Papathanasopoulos, Maria A.
Gray, Glenda E.
Sherman, Gayle G.
Coovadia, Ashraf H.
Kuhn, Louise
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Most infants exposed to HIV-1 in utero and at delivery do not acquire infection. We show that mothers and infants who have CD3-negative cells that respond to HIV-1 peptides are substantially less likely to transmit and acquire infection, respectively. The CD3-negative cells, shown to be NK cells, respond with remarkable specificity and high magnitude to HIV-1 peptides from Env (envelope) and Reg (regulatory) protein regions, as measured by a whole blood intracellular cytokine assay only in the context of HIV-1 infection or exposure. These findings identify an important new measure of protective immunity to HIV-1 that highlights the importance of innate immunity in preventing the establishment of HIV-1 infection.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........1c1e16484410fdb1e906afb8bc08ab04