The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection

There are currently more than 33 million people worldwide who are infected with HIV-1 despite development of novel treatments and knowledge of prevention strategies. Within the Pumwani area of Nairobi, Kenya there is a group of commercial sex workers who are highly exposed to HIV-1. A small subset o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mlinar, Diana
Other Authors: Plummer, Francis Allan (Medical Microbiology)
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Subjects:
HIV
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3104
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-31042014-01-31T03:31:38Z The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection Mlinar, Diana Plummer, Francis Allan (Medical Microbiology) Embree, Joanne (Medical Microbiology) Kung, Sam (Immunology) HIV resistance immunology There are currently more than 33 million people worldwide who are infected with HIV-1 despite development of novel treatments and knowledge of prevention strategies. Within the Pumwani area of Nairobi, Kenya there is a group of commercial sex workers who are highly exposed to HIV-1. A small subset of these women have been classified as resistant to HIV-1 infection as they remain HIV un-infected despite as many as 60 unprotected sexual exposures to HIV each year. A better understanding of such a natural model of HIV resistance would be invaluable to inform the development of a protective HIV vaccine or microbicide. Globally, heterosexual transmission of HIV across mucosal surfaces is responsible for the bulk of new infections and thus it is important to examine both the macro and the micro environments of the vaginal mucosa in efforts to determine what enhances and what thwarts HIV-infection. Previous studies have shown elevated levels of RANTES, a natural ligand for the dominant HIV co-receptor CCR5, in cervicovaginal secretions of HIV-resistant women. Additionally, a novel HIV-inhibitor, Trappin-2 was previously shown to be elevated in cervicovaginal secretions of HIV-resistant women. To test the hypothesis that RANTES and Trappin-2 in cervicovaginal fluid are important mediators of HIV resistance we will: 1) measure RANTES in a much larger group of women from the Pumwani cohort, and 2) measure Trappin-2 levels in samples taken at different time points, and 3) correlate Trappin-2 levels in cervicovaginal fluid with biological confounding variables, and 4) investigate whether SDF-1 plays a role in HIV-disease progression in HIV-positive women. 2009-01-06T23:09:40Z 2009-01-06T23:09:40Z 2009-01-06T23:09:40Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3104 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic HIV
resistance
immunology
spellingShingle HIV
resistance
immunology
Mlinar, Diana
The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
description There are currently more than 33 million people worldwide who are infected with HIV-1 despite development of novel treatments and knowledge of prevention strategies. Within the Pumwani area of Nairobi, Kenya there is a group of commercial sex workers who are highly exposed to HIV-1. A small subset of these women have been classified as resistant to HIV-1 infection as they remain HIV un-infected despite as many as 60 unprotected sexual exposures to HIV each year. A better understanding of such a natural model of HIV resistance would be invaluable to inform the development of a protective HIV vaccine or microbicide. Globally, heterosexual transmission of HIV across mucosal surfaces is responsible for the bulk of new infections and thus it is important to examine both the macro and the micro environments of the vaginal mucosa in efforts to determine what enhances and what thwarts HIV-infection. Previous studies have shown elevated levels of RANTES, a natural ligand for the dominant HIV co-receptor CCR5, in cervicovaginal secretions of HIV-resistant women. Additionally, a novel HIV-inhibitor, Trappin-2 was previously shown to be elevated in cervicovaginal secretions of HIV-resistant women. To test the hypothesis that RANTES and Trappin-2 in cervicovaginal fluid are important mediators of HIV resistance we will: 1) measure RANTES in a much larger group of women from the Pumwani cohort, and 2) measure Trappin-2 levels in samples taken at different time points, and 3) correlate Trappin-2 levels in cervicovaginal fluid with biological confounding variables, and 4) investigate whether SDF-1 plays a role in HIV-disease progression in HIV-positive women.
author2 Plummer, Francis Allan (Medical Microbiology)
author_facet Plummer, Francis Allan (Medical Microbiology)
Mlinar, Diana
author Mlinar, Diana
author_sort Mlinar, Diana
title The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
title_short The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
title_full The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
title_fullStr The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
title_full_unstemmed The role of Trappin-2 and RANTES in mediating resistance to HIV-1 infection
title_sort role of trappin-2 and rantes in mediating resistance to hiv-1 infection
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3104
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