HIV-1 exposed uninfected men who have sex with men have increased levels of salivary CC-chemokines associated with sexual behavior.
Hasselrot. Klara K; Bratt. Göran G; Duvefelt. Kristina K; Hirbod. Taha T; Sandström. Eric E; Broliden. Kristina K
Key Findings
- Exposed uninfected MSM had higher salivary CC‑chemokines (CCL2, CCL4, CCL5, CCL11) than low‑risk controls
- LL‑37 levels in saliva were the same between exposed individuals and controls
- Higher CC‑chemokine levels correlated with more unprotected oral sex and with saliva’s ability to neutralize HIV
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 doesn’t appear to boost saliva’s anti‑HIV activity, so supplementing it isn’t a useful strategy for HIV protection. Focus on other factors like CC‑chemokines or broader immune health rather than LL‑37 for this purpose.
Summary
The study looked at saliva from men who have sex with men who were exposed to HIV but stayed uninfected. It found higher levels of certain immune chemicals (CC-chemokines) linked to sexual behavior, but the peptide LL‑37 was not higher and didn’t seem to help block HIV. So there’s no clear action you can take with LL‑37 for HIV protection based on this work.
Abstract
To determine whether soluble molecules with known anti-HIV-1 activity are increased in saliva of HIV-1 exposed uninfected individuals of discordant couples of men who have sex with men (MSM), and whether the levels of these molecules are associated with genetic polymorphisms, sexual behavior and/or HIV-1 neutralizing capacity. Saliva and PBMC were collected from exposed uninfected individuals (n=25), and low-risk controls (n=22). Levels of CCL2, CCL3, CCL4, CCL5 and CCL11 were detected by Luminex, and SLPI, LL-37, alpha-defensins and IgA2 were detected by ELISA. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were investigated using mass spectrometry or PCR-sequencing. HIV-1 neutralizing activity was assessed using PBMCbased neutralization assays. Self-reported questionnaires described sexual behavior. Exposed uninfected individuals had significantly higher levels of salivary CCL2, CCL4, CCL5 and CCL11 as compared with controls although genetic polymorphisms within the corresponding regions were equally distributed. IgA2 was also increased in exposed uninfected individuals, whereas neither CCL3, SLPI, LL-37 nor alpha-defensins differed between exposed uninfected individuals and controls. The HIV-1 neutralizing capacity of saliva was associated with higher levels of CC-chemokines (but not SLPI, LL-37, alpha-defensins or IgA2) in both exposed uninfected individuals and controls. The increased levels of CC-chemokines were associated with a higher frequency of unprotected oral sex and/or additional casual sex partners. HIV-1 exposed uninfected MSM had higher levels of salivary CC-chemokines compared with controls, this finding associated with sexual behavior rather than with genetic polymorphisms. The increased levels of CC-chemokines associated with HIV-1 neutralizing capacity in saliva.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-06-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1097/qad.0b013e32833ac646