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Kroidl, Inge; Chachage, Mkunde; Mnkai, Jonathan; Nsojo, Anthony; Berninghoff, Myrna; Verweij, Jaco J.; Maganga, Lucas; Ntinginya, Nyanda E.; Maboko, Leonard; Clowes, Petra; Hoelscher, Michael; Saathoff, Elmar und Geldmacher, Christof (2019): Wuchereria bancrofti infection is linked to systemic activation of CD4 and CD8 T cells.
In: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 13(8), e0007623 [PDF, 1MB]

Abstract

Background Susceptibility to HIV has been linked to systemic CD4+ T cell activation in cohorts of seronegative individuals with high HIV-exposure risk. We recently described an increased risk of HIV transmission in individuals infected with Wuchereria bancrofti, the causative agent for lymphatic filariasis, in a prospective cohort study. However, the reason for this phenomenon needs further investigation. Methodology/Principal findings Two-hundred and thirty-five HIV negative adults were tested using Trop Bio ELISA for detection of W. bancrofti infection and Kato Katz urine filtration and stool based RT-PCR for detection of soil transmitted helminths and schistosomiasis. FACS analysis of the fresh peripheral whole blood was used to measure T cell activation markers (HLA-DR, CD38), differentiation markers (CD45, CD27), markers for regulatory T cells (FoxP3, CD25) and the HIV entry receptor CCR5. Frequencies of activated HLA-DRpos CD4 T cells were significantly increased in subjects with W. bancrofti infection (n = 33 median: 10.71%) compared to subjects without any helminth infection (n = 42, median 6.97%, p = 0.011) or those with other helminths (Schistosoma haematobium, S. mansoni, Trichuris trichiura, Ascaris lumbricoides, hookworm) (n = 151, median 7.38%, p = 0.009). Similarly, a significant increase in HLA-DR(pos)CD38(pos) CD4 T cells and effector memory cells CD4 T cells (CD45RO(pos)CD27(neg)) was observed in filarial infected participants. Multivariable analyses further confirmed a link between W. bancrofti infection and systemic activation of CD4 T cells independent of age, fever, gender or other helminth infections. Conclusions/Significance W. bancrofti infection is linked to systemic CD4 T cell activation, which may contribute to the increased susceptibility of W. bancrofti infected individuals to HIV infection.

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