4.7 Article

Effects of HCV co-infection on apoptosis of CD4+ T-cells in HIV positive patients

Journal

CLINICAL SCIENCE
Volume 116, Issue 11-12, Pages 861-870

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/CS20080532

Keywords

apoptosis; CD4(+) T-cell; hepatitis C virus; highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART); HIV-1; protease inhibitor

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01K10792]
  2. H. W and J. Hector Foundation [M42]

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Apoptosis importantly contributes to loss of CD4(+) T-cells in HIV infection, and modification of their apoptosis may explain why HIV/HCV (hepatitis C virus)-co-infected patients are more likely to die from liver-related causes, although the effects of HCV on HIV infection remain unclear. In the present study, we studied in a cross-sectional and serial analysis spontaneous ex vivo CD4(+) T-cell apoptosis in HIV/HCV co-infected and HIV-mono-infected patients before and after HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy). Apoptosis of peripheral blood CD4(+) T-cells was measured by both a PARP [poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase] and TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling) assay to detect cells with irreversible apoptosis. Although hepatitis C alone did not increase CD4(+) T-cell apoptosis, HCV co-infection disproportionately increased elevated rates of apoptosis in CD4(+) T-cells from untreated HIV-positive patients. Increased CD4(+) T-cell apoptosis was closely correlated with HIV, but not HCV, viral loads. Under HAART increased rates of CD4(+) T-cell apoptosis rapidly decreased both in HIV-mono-infected and HIV/HCV co-infected patients, without any significant difference in apoptosis rates between the two patient groups after 4 weeks of therapy. Nevertheless residual CD4(+) T-cell apoptosis did not reach the normal levels seen in healthy controls and remained higher in HIV patients receiving protease inhibitors than in patients with other antiretroviral regimens. The results of the present study suggest that HCV co-infection sensitizes CD4(+) T-cells towards apoptosis in untreated HIV positive patients. However, this effect is rapidly lost under effective antiretroviral therapy.

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