Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

immunology and microbiology

Differential production of interleukin 10 during human immunodeficiency virus infection

AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, Volume 12, No. 12, Year 1996

Interleukin 10, a product of T and B cells and monocytes, displays many Th2-like properties through inhibition of Th1 cell functions. Interleukin 10 is thought to play a major role in the immune dysfunction seen in HIV- infected individuals. In this study, we evaluated in detail the production of IL-10 during HIV infection. Although the constitutive production of IL- 10 did not differ in PBMCs from healthy donors and HIV-infected individuals, IL-10 was differentially produced in response to polyclonal activators. The overall plasma IL-10 levels were similar in 32 controls and 67 patients at different stages of the disease and receiving different antiretroviral drugs. However, patients with low CD4 T cell count (<200/mm3) secreted approximately threefold more IL-10 than did patients with high CD4 T cell count (>500/mm3). Competitive/quantitative PCR revealed similar levels of mRNA expression in PBMCs from controls and HIV-infected individuals. In vitro HIV infection rapidly and transiently induced IL-10 production in PBMCs and monocytes, and the low level of endogenously secreted IL-10 failed to inhibit HIV replication in acutely infected monocytes. On the other hand, HIV infection of selected CD4+ T cell clones generated in a Th1- or Th2- like environment, differentially upregulated IL-10 production, with significantly higher production by Th2 clones. Together, our data indicate that IL-10 production is more complex than previously thought, and may depend on several factors such as producer cells, nature of the stimuli, as well as viral isolates.
Statistics
Citations: 28
Authors: 3
Affiliations: 1
Identifiers
Research Areas
Infectious Diseases
Study Approach
Quantitative