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People living with HIV display increased anti-apolipoprotein A1 auto-antibodies, inflammation, and kynurenine metabolites : a case–control study

Publié dansFrontiers in cardiovascular medicine, vol. 11, 1343361
Date de publication2024-02-13
Date de mise en ligne2024-02-13
Résumé

Objective

This study aimed to study the relationship between auto-antibodies against apolipoprotein A1 (anti-apoA1 IgG), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, anti-retroviral therapy (ART), and the tryptophan pathways in HIV-related cardiovascular disease.

Design

This case–control study conducted in South Africa consisted of control volunteers ( n  = 50), people living with HIV (PLWH) on ART ( n  = 50), and untreated PLWH ( n  = 44). Cardiovascular risk scores were determined, vascular measures were performed, and an extensive biochemical characterisation (routine, metabolomic, and inflammatory systemic profiles) was performed.

Methods

Anti-apoA1 IgG levels were assessed by an in-house ELISA. Inflammatory biomarkers were measured with the Meso Scale Discovery® platform, and kynurenine pathway metabolites were assessed using targeted metabolomic profiling conducted by liquid chromatography-multiple reaction monitoring/mass spectrometry (LC-MRM/MS).

Results

Cardiovascular risk scores and vascular measures exhibited similarities across the three groups, while important differences were observed in systemic inflammatory and tryptophan pathways. Anti-apoA1 IgG seropositivity rates were 15%, 40%, and 70% in control volunteers, PLWH ART-treated, and PLWH ART-naïve, respectively. Circulating anti-apoA1 IgG levels were significantly negatively associated with CD4+ cell counts and positively associated with viremia and pro-inflammatory biomarkers (IFNγ, TNFα, MIPα, ICAM-1, VCAM-1). While circulating anti-apoA1 IgG levels were associated with increased levels of kynurenine in both control volunteers and PLWH, the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio was significantly increased in PLWH ART-treated.

Conclusion

HIV infection increases the humoral response against apoA1, which is associated with established HIV severity criteria and kynurenine pathway activation.

eng
Mots-clés
  • HIV
  • Anti-apolipoprotein A1 auto-antibodies
  • Anti-retroviral therapy
  • Autoimmunity
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Kynurenine pathway metabolites
Citation (format ISO)
FRIAS, Miguel et al. People living with HIV display increased anti-apolipoprotein A1 auto-antibodies, inflammation, and kynurenine metabolites : a case–control study. In: Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine, 2024, vol. 11, p. 1343361. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2024.1343361
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Article (Published version)
Identifiants
ISSN du journal2297-055X
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Informations techniques

Création06.03.2024 14:57:41
Première validation23.04.2024 07:14:20
Heure de mise à jour23.04.2024 07:14:20
Changement de statut23.04.2024 07:14:20
Dernière indexation06.05.2024 18:26:40
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