Expansion of monocyte subset could serve as a biomarker for HIV progressions
An increase in the CD163+/CD16+
monocyte subset could be a biomarker for the progression of HIV
disease, according to researchers at Temple University.
The researchers reported their findings, “CD163/CD16
Coexpression by Circulating Monocytes/Macrophages in HIV: Potential
Biomarkers for HIV Infection and AIDS Progression,” in the March issue
of AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses (www.liebertonline.com/aid).
A
monocyte is a specific white blood cell, a part of the human body’s
immune system that protects against blood-borne pathogens and moves
quickly to sites of infection within the body’s tissues. As monocytes
enter tissue, they undergo a series of changes to become macrophages. The researchers were investigating alterations in this
monocyte subset in patients with HIV infection. As part of this study,
they examined a cohort of 18 patients from the Comprehensive HIV
Program at Temple University Hospital, under the direction of Ellen
Tedaldi, and seven individuals without HIV infection. “At first, we were just looking at whether or not we saw
alterations in this CD163+/CD16+ subset and whether it might be
reflective of the amount of virus they have in circulation,” said Tracy
Fischer-Smith, an associate scientist in Temple’s Neuroscience
Department and the study’s lead author. “We did, indeed, find that
patients with detectable virus had an increase of this monocyte subset
that correlated with the amount of virus they had in their blood. We
were surprised to find that patients with CD4+ T cell counts of less
than 450 cells per microliter [200 or less per microliter is defined as
AIDS], the increase of this monocyte subset correlates inversely with
the number of T cells.” Fischer-Smith said this finding suggests that as the monocyte
cells are increasing, these patients are losing CD4+ T cells, which are
critical for the maintenance of immunological competence. “This may actually provide an earlier window into what is
happening with HIV-infected patients where we might be able to see that
immune impairment is taking place before we see a dramatic loss of CD4+
T cells,” she said. “It looks like, based on these correlations, that this
particular cell type may be involved in immune impairment and the
progression of HIV,” said Jay Rappaport, professor of neuroscience and
neurovirology, who oversaw the study. “Is it a good prognostic
indicator" If you have a lot of these monocytes, does it mean you are
going to progress into AIDS faster" “Right now, all we know is what the
correlations are,” he said. Rappaport added that he believes the CD163+/CD16+ monocyte
subset is the first biomarker that correlates with viral load and CD4+
count. “The fact that it actually correlates with both, we think, might
make it a key cell type in the pathogenesis of AIDS.” Fischer-Smith
said the researchers plan to expand this study by following a cohort of
patients longitudinally to see if their findings really can provide
doctors with an early warning system and help to design better
therapeutic strategies. “When you are just looking at a single time-point, you don’t
know how changes in this monocyte subset might occur over time, and how
these changes might relate to the viral load and T cell number in
individual patients,” she said. “That is why we want to investigate
this further with a longitudinal study of HIV patients.” Go Back to Other News Stories
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