Impaired humoral responses to subgenus D adenovirusenovirus infections in HIV-positive patients

Alan Lord, Andrew S. Bailey, Paul E. Klapper, Neil Snowden, Saye H. Khoo*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

HIV-positive patients are at increased risk of developing adenovirus infection, particularly of the gastrointestinal tract and with unusual subgenus D strains. To investigate humoral immunity to these strains of adenoviruses, the humoral immune response was examined in longitudinal samples of serum against isolates collected from a prospective study of HIV-positive patients with subgenus D adenovirus infection. Of 10 HIV-positive patients developing adenovirus infection, 3 had chronic infection (8->27 months) with one serotype, 3 had chronic infection (≥10 months) with changing serotypes and 4 had acute and self-limiting adenovirus infection (<1 month). Fifty-one sera were tested, and samples collected before adenovirus infection were available in 8 patients. Neutralising assays were performed against the patient's own isolate (adeno-viruses 9, 17, 19, 19/23, 19/37, 23, 26, 23/26, 43 and 46) and common circulating strains of adenovirus 1-5. Indirect immunofluorescence tests were carried out against the autologous isolate and complement-fixation tests were undertaken using a standard assay. Immunofluorescence test antibodies were detected (titre ≥160) in all patients, and present to high titre (≥320) in 8/10 patients. Complement-fixing antibodies were not detected in significant titre. Of particular note, there was no significant neutralising antibody response to the patient's own isolate after acute infection. Neutralising antibody to adeno-virus 3 (titre 20) was transiently detected in two patients. In the remaining patients neutralising antibody directed against adenoviruses 1-5 was not detected. Persistent carriage of subgenus D adenoviruses in HIV-positive patients is probably the result of failure of cell-mediated immune responses to clear primary infection. Nevertheless, there is marked impairment of B cell responses resulting in poor neutralising and complement-fixing antibody production even though immunofluorescence test determined antibodies are produced in high titre. These possibly reflect impairment of effective B cell priming mechanisms within the germinal centres of lymph nodes, or the polyclonal activation of B cells driven by HIV infection. (C) 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)405-409
Number of pages5
JournalJournal Of Medical Virology
Volume62
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2000

Keywords

  • Adenovirusenovirus
  • Antibodies
  • Natural history
  • Opportunistic infections

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