Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in association with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis: Views over hidden possibilities
Open Access
- 30 November 2007
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in AIDS Research and Therapy
- Vol. 4 (1) , 29
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-6405-4-29
Abstract
Gut immune components are severely compromised among persons with AIDS, which allows increased translocation of bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) into the systemic circulation. These microbial LPS are reportedly increased in chronically HIV-infected individuals and findings have correlated convincingly with measures of immune activation. Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) is an adverse consequence of the restoration of pathogen-specific immune responses in a subset of HIV-infected subjects with underlying latent infections during the initial months of highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART). Whether IRIS is the result of a response to a high antigen burden, an excessive response by the recovering immune system, exacerbated production of pro-inflammatory cytokines or a lack of immune regulation due to inability to produce regulatory cytokines remains to be determined. We theorize that those who develop IRIS have a high burden of proinflammatory cytokines produced also in response to systemic bacterial LPS that nonspecifically act on latent mycobacterial antigens. We also hypothesize that subjects that do not develop IRIS could have developed either tolerance (anergy) to persistent LPS/tubercle antigens or could have normal FOXP3+ gene and that those with defective FOXP3+ gene or those with enormous plasma LPS could be vulnerable to IRIS. The measure of microbial LPS, anti-LPS antibodies and nonspecific plasma cytokines in subjects on HAART shall predict the role of these components in IRIS.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microbial translocation is a cause of systemic immune activation in chronic HIV infectionNature Medicine, 2006
- Intestinal Permeability and Systemic Endotoxemia After Laparotomic or Laparoscopic CholecystectomyAnnals of Surgery, 2006
- Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome: more answers, more questionsJournal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 2005
- Peak SIV replication in resting memory CD4+ T cells depletes gut lamina propria CD4+ T cellsNature, 2005
- Interactions between commensal intestinal bacteria and the immune systemNature Reviews Immunology, 2004
- IMPAIRED EX VIVO LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE-STIMULATED WHOLE BLOOD TUMOR NECROSIS FACTOR PRODUCTION MAY IDENTIFY “SEPTIC” INTENSIVE CARE UNIT PATIENTSShock, 2000
- Reduced Th1, but Not Th2, Cytokine Production by Lymphocytes after In Vivo Exposure of Healthy Subjects to EndotoxinInfection and Immunity, 2000
- Sarcoidosis in a patient with AIDS: A manifestation of immune restoration syndromeJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1999
- Antiinflammatory Cytokine Responses during Clinical Sepsis and Experimental Endotoxemia: Sequential Measurements of Plasma Soluble Interleukin (IL)-1 Receptor Type II, IL-10, and IL-13The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Desensitization of Macrophages to Endotoxin Effects Is Not Correlated with a Down-Regulation of Lipopolysaccharide-Binding SitesCellular Immunology, 1993