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Erschienen in: BMC Infectious Diseases 3/2014

Open Access 01.05.2014 | Poster presentation

Hepatitis C virus infection contributes to impregnation of markers of immune inhibition: potential preludes underlying viral latency and persistence

verfasst von: Muttiah Barathan, Mohamed Rosmawati, Jamuna Vadivelu, Marie Larsson, Vijayakumar Velu, Saeidi Alireza, Li Yen Chang, Esaki Muthu Shankar

Erschienen in: BMC Infectious Diseases | Sonderheft 3/2014

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Background

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) represents one of the persistent viral infections afflicting humankind, and a significant proportion of chronic HCV disease progresses over time through liver fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). One potential mechanism underlying the chronic disease is believed to be viral escape from immune surveillance via upregulation of inhibitory molecules on immune cells by HCV. We investigated the diverse expression of various inhibitory molecules in PBMCs of healthy non-HCV controls and chronically HCV infected patients.

Methods

The expression of inhibitory molecules on PBMCs was investigated in chronic HCV infected patients relative to healthy non-HCV controls using standard immunological and molecular methods. The serum levels of indoleamine 2, 3 deoxygenase (IDO) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) were also investigated.

Results

The gene expression profile of chronically HCV infected patients was significantly different from control individuals. Our results showed upregulation of TIM-3 (p≤0.01), PD-1 (p≤0.01), FOXP-3 (p≤0.01), BLIMP-1 (p≤0.01), CD160 (p≤0.01), CTLA-4 (p≤0.01), TRAIL (p≤0.01), BTLA (p≤0.01) and LAG-3 (p≤0.01) with fold change of 1.3, 0.4, 14.6, 0.87, 6.6, 0.4, 14.7, 10.9 and 2.5 respectively in chronically HCV infected patients. The plasma IDO and COX-2 levels were significantly higher (p=0.001) in chronically HCV infected subjects relative to healthy control.

Conclusion

The upregulation of inhibitory molecules on PBMCs in chronically HCV infected patients suggest the contribution of these molecules to immune cells impairment in HCV infection. Viral persistence and eventual progression following potential evasion of the host immune armory via viral impregnation of inhibitory immune biosignatures in HCV disease pathogenesis warrants further elucidation.
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made.
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Metadaten
Titel
Hepatitis C virus infection contributes to impregnation of markers of immune inhibition: potential preludes underlying viral latency and persistence
verfasst von
Muttiah Barathan
Mohamed Rosmawati
Jamuna Vadivelu
Marie Larsson
Vijayakumar Velu
Saeidi Alireza
Li Yen Chang
Esaki Muthu Shankar
Publikationsdatum
01.05.2014
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Infectious Diseases / Ausgabe Sonderheft 3/2014
Elektronische ISSN: 1471-2334
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-14-S3-P3

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