Endothelial colony-forming cells and inflammatory monocytes in HIV.
Abstract
The relationships between HIV infection, monocyte activation, and endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs) are unknown. We compared ECFC, intermediate monocytes (CD14 CD16), and nonclassical monocytes (CD14 CD16) levels in HIV-infected participants virologically suppressed on antiretroviral therapy, HIV-infected treatment-naive participants, and HIV-uninfected healthy controls. ECFC levels were significantly higher in the HIV-infected virologically suppressed group compared with the uninfected controls. CD14 CD16 percentages (but not CD14 CD16 cells) were significantly higher in both HIV-infected groups vs. uninfected controls. In the HIV-infected groups, ECFCs and CD14 CD16 intermediate monocytes were significantly and inversely correlated. Lower availability of ECFCs may partly explain the relationship between greater intermediate monocytes and atherosclerosis in HIV.
| Authors: | Hays TR, Mund JA, Liu Z, Case J, Ingram DA, Gupta SK. |
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| Journal: | J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr.;68:550-3 |
| Year: | 2015 |
| PubMed: | Find in PubMed |