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Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTb) is the leading cause of death in the setting of AIDS. MTb enhances the pathogenicity and accelerates the course of HIV disease and, furthermore, infection with HIV-1 increases the risk of reactivation or reinfection with MTb. In this study, we show that host-specific recall responses to one pathogen, MTb, has a direct effect upon the regulation of a second pathogen, HIV-1. Using cells from immunocompetent former tuberculosis (TB) patients who displayed either a persistently positive (responsive) or negative (anergic), delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reaction to intradermal injection of purified protein derivative (PPD), we investigated the effect of recall Ags to MTb upon the replication of HIV-1 primary isolates in vitro. We show that HIV-1 replication of a T cell-tropic isolate was significantly impaired in MTb-stimulated PBMC from PPD-anergic donors. Furthermore, these donors displayed a significant increase in CD8(+) T cells and IL-10 levels and lower levels of IL-2 and TNF-alpha relative to PPD-responsive donors in response to PPD stimulation. Strikingly, CD8(+) T cell depletion and blocking of IL-10 significantly increased HIV-1 replication in these PPD-anergic donors, indicating that an immunosuppressive response to MTb recall Ags inhibits HIV-1 replication in PPD-anergic individuals. Therefore, immunotherapeutic approaches aimed at recapitulating Ag-specific MTb anergy in vivo could result in novel and effective approaches to inhibit HIV-1 disease progression in MTb/HIV-1 coinfection.  相似文献   
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Evidence was obtained for the interaction between the photosystem 2 (PS2) reaction centre (RC) chlorophyll (Chl) P680 and inorganic phosphate, Pi. The light-induced endogenous basal electron transport to ferricyanide in PS2 depended on endogenous Pi. The electron transport in phosphate deficient chloroplasts was absent, and could be resumed upon the addition of exogenous Pi or of the exogenous electron donor, diphenylcarbazide. Some chloroplast Chl molecules were apparently bound with Pi to a complex via the magnesium atom that was detected by the increase in absorbance in the Chl a absorption maximum at 435 nm observed after the consumption of endogenous Pi in the photophosphorylation reactions. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) Signal I, found in the spectra at 77 K after irradiation of frozen samples in chloroplasts poor in endogenous Pi, was the sum of P700+ and P680+ signals. The P680+ signal disappeared after addition of Pi, diphenylcarbazide or diuron to the chloroplasts before freezing. In addition, the EPR doublet signal of the phosphate anion radicals was recorded at 77 K after irradiation in the ethanol solutions of Chl a containing potassium phosphate. The same doublet signal was discovered in the difference EPR spectrum "chloroplasts minus chloroplasts with diuron" at 77 K after irradation. The results are a possible evidence of the participation of phosphate ions in the primary light reactions of PS2.  相似文献   
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After infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, clinical disease usually remains latent, contained by the host immune response. Although polymorphisms of HLA loci have been hypothesized to play a major role in the breakdown of latency, a functional link has not been established. Molecular-based HLA-typing methods were used to test the association of sets of HLA alleles encoding an aspartic acid at codon 57 of the HLA-DQ beta-chain (HLA-DQ beta57-Asp) with susceptibility to tuberculosis in a cohort of 436 pulmonary tuberculosis patients and 107 healthy controls from Cambodia. HLA class II null cells were transduced with HLA-DQ beta57-Asp or HLA-DQ beta57-Ala and evaluated for their ability to bind peptides from two immunogenic M. tuberculosis specific proteins, ESAT-6 and CFP-10. In this study, we report a highly significant association between progressive pulmonary tuberculosis and homozygosity for HLA-DQ beta57-Asp alleles. The presence of HLA-DQ beta57-Asp resulted in a significantly reduced ability to bind a peptide from the central region of the ESAT-6 protein. Furthermore, when this peptide was presented by an HLA-DQ beta57-Asp allele, Ag-specific IFN-gamma production from CD4+ T cells from tuberculosis patients was significantly less than when this peptide was presented by an HLA-DQ-beta allele encoding an alanine at codon 57. Multiple genetic loci and ethnic-specific factors are likely involved in the human immune response to tuberculosis. The data presented here provide a functional explanation for a highly significant association between an HLA polymorphism and tuberculosis in a highly characterized group of patients with susceptibility to progressive tuberculosis infection in Cambodia.  相似文献   
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The level of ongoing HIV-1 replication within an individual is critical to HIV-1 pathogenesis. Among host immune factors, the cytokine TNF-alpha has previously been shown to increase HIV-1 replication in various monocyte and T cell model systems. Here, we demonstrate that signaling through the TNF receptor family member, the lymphotoxin-beta (LT-beta) receptor (LT-betaR), also regulates HIV-1 replication. Furthermore, HIV-1 replication is cooperatively stimulated when the distinct LT-betaR and TNF receptor systems are simultaneously engaged by their specific ligands. Moreover, in a physiological coculture cellular assay system, we show that membrane-bound TNF-alpha and LT-alpha1beta2 act virtually identically to their soluble forms in the regulation of HIV-1 replication. Thus, cosignaling via the LT-beta and TNF-alpha receptors is probably involved in the modulation of HIV-1 replication and the subsequent determination of HIV-1 viral burden in monocytes. Intriguingly, surface expression of LT-alpha1beta2 is up-regulated on a T cell line acutely infected with HIV-1, suggesting a positive feedback loop between HIV-1 infection, LT-alpha1beta2 expression, and HIV-1 replication. Given the critical role that LT-alpha1beta2 plays in lymphoid architecture, we speculate that LT-alpha1beta2 may be involved in HIV-associated abnormalities of the lymphoid organs.  相似文献   
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