Shared monocyte subset phenotypes in HIV-1 infection and in uninfected subjects with acute coronary syndrome

NT Funderburg, DA Zidar, C Shive… - Blood, The Journal …, 2012 - ashpublications.org
NT Funderburg, DA Zidar, C Shive, A Lioi, J Mudd, LW Musselwhite, DI Simon, MA Costa…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2012ashpublications.org
The mechanisms responsible for increased cardiovascular risk associated with HIV-1
infection are incompletely defined. Using flow cytometry, in the present study, we examined
activation phenotypes of monocyte subpopulations in patients with HIV-1 infection or acute
coronary syndrome to find common cellular profiles. Nonclassic (CD14+ CD16++) and
intermediate (CD14++ CD16+) monocytes are proportionally increased and express high
levels of tissue factor and CD62P in HIV-1 infection. These proportions are related to …
Abstract
The mechanisms responsible for increased cardiovascular risk associated with HIV-1 infection are incompletely defined. Using flow cytometry, in the present study, we examined activation phenotypes of monocyte subpopulations in patients with HIV-1 infection or acute coronary syndrome to find common cellular profiles. Nonclassic (CD14+CD16++) and intermediate (CD14++CD16+) monocytes are proportionally increased and express high levels of tissue factor and CD62P in HIV-1 infection. These proportions are related to viremia, T-cell activation, and plasma levels of IL-6. In vitro exposure of whole blood samples from uninfected control donors to lipopolysaccharide increased surface tissue factor expression on all monocyte subsets, but exposure to HIV-1 resulted in activation only of nonclassic monocytes. Remarkably, the profile of monocyte activation in uncontrolled HIV-1 disease mirrors that of acute coronary syndrome in uninfected persons. Therefore, drivers of immune activation and inflammation in HIV-1 disease may alter monocyte subpopulations and activation phenotype, contributing to a pro-atherothrombotic state that may drive cardiovascular risk in HIV-1 infection.
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