PMID: 9190952Jun 15, 1997Paper

IL-15 enhances immune functions during HIV infection

The Journal of Immunology : Official Journal of the American Association of Immunologists
J ChehimiS Chouaib

Abstract

IL-15, a new cytokine primarily produced by macrophages, has been shown to exhibit several functional properties shared with IL-2. Treatment of PBMC from HIV-infected patients with IL-15 resulted in an increase in NK cell cytotoxicity to levels similar to those of untreated PBMC from healthy donors. This effect is independent of several well-characterized regulatory cytokines, as it is not prevented by Abs that neutralize IFNs, TNF-alpha, IL-2, or IL-12. Enhanced cytotoxicity was accompanied by a significant increase in expression of cytotoxic granules. IL-15 enhanced the proliferative ability in both controls and HIV-seropositive in response to mitogen and recall Ags. Although the addition of IL-15 has a preventive effect on the appearance of spontaneous cell death, this effect was not seen during mitogen-induced apoptosis. The production of IL-15 by PBMC from patients in response to Staphylococcus aureus Cowan strain 1 appeared heterogeneous and was not negatively regulated by cytokines that inhibited IL-12 production. No correlation was found between in vitro HIV infection and IL-15 production, as viral infection had no effect on the ability of monocytes to produce IL-15 in response to S. aureus. Interestingly IL-15 restored...Continue Reading

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