diminished cd103 (aeb7) expression on resident t cells from the female genital tract of hiv-positive women
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2017
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Abstract
Background:Tissue resident memory T cells (TrM) provide an enhanced response against infection at mucosal surfaces, yet their function has not been extensively studied in humans, including the female genital tract (FGT).
Methods: Using polychromatic flow cytometry, we studied TrM cells, defined as CD62L-CCR7-CD103+CD69+ CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in mucosa-derived T cells from healthy and HIV-positive women.
Results: We demonstrate that TrM are present in the FGT of healthy and HIV-positive women. The expression of the mucosal retention receptor, CD103, from HIV-positive women was reduced compared to healthy women and was lowest in women with CD4 counts < 500 cells/mm3. Furthermore, CD103 expression on mucosa-derived CD8+ T cells correlated with antigen-specific IFN-γ production by mucosal CD4+ T cells and was inversely correlated with T-bet from CD8+CD103+ mucosa-derived T cells.
Conclusions: These data suggest that CD4+ T cells, known to be impaired during HIV-1 infection and necessary for the expression of CD103 in murine models, may play a role in the expression of CD103 on resident T cells from the human FGT.
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| Reference Key |
moylan2017pathogensdiminished
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| Authors | ;David C. Moylan;Paul A. Goepfert;Mirjam-Colette Kempf;Michael S. Saag;Holly E. Richter;Jiri Mestecky;Steffanie Sabbaj |
| Journal | value in health |
| Year | 2017 |
| DOI |
10.20411/pai.v1i2.166
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