Abstract
BackgroundEpidemiological studies suggest that medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) may increase the risk of HIV-1. The current studies were designed to identify potential underlying biological mechanisms.MethodsHuman vaginal epithelial (VK2/E6E7), peripheral blood mononuclear (PBMC), and polarized endometrial (HEC-1-A) cells were treated with a range of concentrations of MPA (0.015-150 μg/ml) and the impact on gene expression, protein secretion, and HIV infection was evaluated.ResultsTreatment of VK2/E6E7 cells with high doses (>15μg/ml] of MPA significantly upregulated proinflammatory cytokines, which resulted in a significant increase in HIV p24 levels secreted by latently infected U1 cells following exposure to culture supernatants harvested from MPA compared to mock-treated cells. MPA also increased syndecan expression by VK2/E6E7 cells and cells treated with 15 μg/ml of MPA bound and transferred more HIV-1 to T cells compared to mock-treated cells. Moreover, MPA treatment of epithelial cells and PBMC significantly decreased cell proliferation resulting in disruption of the epithelial barrier and decreased cytokine responses to phytohaemagglutinin, respectively.ConclusionWe identified several molecular mechanisms that could contribute to an association between DMPA and HIV including proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine responses that could activate the HIV promoter and recruit immune targets, increased expression of syndecans to facilitate the transfer of virus from epithelial to immune cells and decreased cell proliferation. The latter could impede the ability to maintain an effective epithelial barrier and adversely impact immune cell function. However, these responses were observed primarily following exposure to high (15-150 μg/ml) MPA concentrations. Clinical correlation is needed to determine whether the prolonged MPA exposure associated with contraception activates these mechanisms in vivo.
Highlights
Injectable hormones such as depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA), offer high efficacy, convenience, low cost, and privacy for women desiring contraception
Treatment of VK2/E6E7 cells with high doses
MPA increased syndecan expression by VK2/ E6E7 cells and cells treated with 15 μg/ml of MPA bound and transferred more HIV-1 to T cells compared to mock-treated cells
Summary
Injectable hormones such as depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA), offer high efficacy, convenience, low cost, and privacy for women desiring contraception. Marked thinning of the epithelium is observed in macaques treated with a high dose (30 mg) of DMPA [8], whereas studies with doses designed to mimic the clinical setting (3 mg) [9] and human data suggest little or modest effects on epithelial thickness [11,12,13,14]. In a 12-month longitudinal study of 32 women who initiated DMPA, decreased numbers of CD3+ cells and CD3+ cells expressing CCR5 were observed by immunohistochemistry compared to baseline vaginal biopsies, suggesting that DMPA use may be associated with reduced numbers of HIV target cells in vaginal tissue [21], though the effects of long-term use remain undefined. The current studies were designed to identify potential underlying biological mechanisms
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