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The Semen Microbiome and Its Relationship with Local Immunology and Viral Load in HIV Infection
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نویسنده
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liu c.m. ,osborne b.j.w. ,hungate b.a. ,shahabi k. ,huibner s. ,lester r. ,dwan m.g. ,kovacs c. ,contente-cuomo t.l. ,benko e. ,aziz m. ,price l.b. ,kaul r.
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منبع
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plos pathogens - 2014 - دوره : 10 - شماره : 7
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چکیده
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Semen is a major vector for hiv transmission,but the semen hiv rna viral load (vl) only correlates moderately with the blood vl. viral shedding can be enhanced by genital infections and associated inflammation,but it can also occur in the absence of classical pathogens. thus,we hypothesized that a dysregulated semen microbiome correlates with local hiv shedding. we analyzed semen samples from 49 men who have sex with men (msm),including 22 hiv-uninfected and 27 hiv-infected men,at baseline and after starting antiretroviral therapy (art) using 16s rrna gene-based pyrosequencing and quantitative pcr. we studied the relationship of semen bacteria with hiv infection,semen cytokine levels,and semen vl by linear regression,non-metric multidimensional scaling,and goodness-of-fit test. streptococcus,corynebacterium,and staphylococcus were common semen bacteria,irrespective of hiv status. while ureaplasma was the more abundant mollicutes in hiv-uninfected men,mycoplasma dominated after hiv infection. hiv infection was associated with decreased semen microbiome diversity and richness,which were restored after six months of art. in hiv-infected men,semen bacterial load correlated with seven pro-inflammatory semen cytokines,including il-6 (p = 0.024),tnf-α (p = 0.009),and il-1b (p = 0.002). il-1b in particular was associated with semen vl (r2 = 0.18,p = 0.02). semen bacterial load was also directly linked to the semen hiv vl (r2 = 0.15,p = 0.02). hiv infection reshapes the relationship between semen bacteria and pro-inflammatory cytokines,and both are linked to semen vl,which supports a role of the semen microbiome in hiv sexual transmission. © 2014 liu et al.
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آدرس
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department of pathology,johns hopkins school of medicine,baltimore,md,united states,center for microbial genetics and genomics,northern arizona university,flagstaff,az,united states,center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az, United States, department of medicine,university of toronto,toronto, Canada, department of biology,northern arizona university,flagstaff,az, United States, department of medicine,university of toronto,toronto, Canada, department of medicine,university of toronto,toronto, Canada, center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az, United States, center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az, United States, department of medicine,university of toronto,toronto,canada,maple leaf medical centre,toronto, Canada, center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az, United States, maple leaf medical centre,toronto, Canada, center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az,united states,department of environmental and occupational health,george washington university school of public health,washington,dc, United States, center for microbiomics and human health,translational genomics research institute,flagstaff,az,united states,department of environmental and occupational health,george washington university school of public health,washington,dc, United States, department of medicine,university of toronto,toronto,canada,department of medicine,university health network,toronto, Canada
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Authors
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