PMID: 9449530Feb 4, 1998Paper

Correlation of the suppressive activity of a biological response modifier on the proliferation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and the reduction of HIV titer

Cellular and Molecular Biology
L M VilaX Castillo

Abstract

Activation of CD4+ cells is a prerequisite for infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Thus, any agent capable of suppressing CD4+ cell proliferation could create a refractory stage that would impede viral infection. We have reported, in a previous publication, that a biological response modifier (BRM), polyantigenic immunomodulator (PAI) substantially reduces HIV-1 titer (from 20 to 100%) in peripheral mononuclear cells (PBMC) cultures with high viral titer (p24 = 10(2)-10(5) pg/ml). We are presenting data suggesting that the reported reduction in virus titer seems to be associated with a suppressive activity of PAI on the proliferation of PBMC from intravenous drug users (IVDU) infected and non-infected with HIV-1. PAI, a well characterized BRM, is a mixture of inactivated bacterial and influenza virus vaccines. PBMC from healthy donors and IVDU individuals were exposed to PAI, phytohemagglutinin (PHA), interleukin-2 (IL-2) and to combinations of PAI with either PHA or IL-2. Appropriate controls were included. 3H-thymidine pulsing was used as indicator of cell proliferation. The stimulation index and the difference between mean cpm of test sample and control were used to measure proliferative activity. There was ...Continue Reading

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