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HIV infection causes systemic zinc deficiency and oxidative stress that impairs host immunity in the alveolar space.The purpose of this study is to see if taking two nutritional supplements, zinc and SAMe (S-adenosylmethionine), can improve lung health and immune function in persons with HIV.
The investigators hypothesize that long-term dietary supplementation with zinc and the glutathione precursor SAMe will enhance pulmonary host immune function in HIV-infected individuals who do not respond adequately to ART alone.
Full description
This new proposal entitled "The alveolar macrophage pool is a reservoir of HIV" addresses a fundamental question; specifically, does the alveolar macrophage pool serve as a reservoir of HIV even when peripheral viral suppression is achieved by anti-retroviral therapy (ART) and if so, how does this reservoir alter the environment within the alveolar space and impair alveolar macrophage immune function? This is a critical question to address as lung infections remain the leading cause of death in persons living with HIV even when they are adherent to ART. There is compelling experimental evidence that HIV infection inhibits anti-oxidant defenses within the alveolar space and causes severe redox stress. Based on preliminary data presented in this proposal, the investigators hypothesize that HIV inhibits the expression and actions of Nrf2, the master transcription factor that activates the anti-oxidant response element (ARE), in part by inducing zinc deficiency in this vulnerable microenvironment, and thereby prevents the alveolar epithelium and the alveolar macrophage from generating glutathione and other anti-oxidants that are critically required to maintain a healthy redox potential within the alveolar space. The investigators further hypothesize that as a result of this targeted inhibition of the Nrf2-ARE signaling pathway, HIV promotes its own ability to infect alveolar macrophages and accumulate a large pool of intracellular pro-virus that produces a large HIV reservoir within the alveolar space. In parallel, HIV-induced oxidative stress shifts the alveolar macrophage toward alternative activation (so called 'M2 phenotype'). As a consequence, the innate immune capacity of the alveolar macrophage is impaired and this not only confers further resistance to clearing the viral reservoir but also renders the infected individual susceptible to serious lung infections. The investigators will leverage ongoing collaborative clinical studies in HIV-infected individuals. As a result, investigators not only have ongoing access to alveolar epithelial lining fluid and macrophages from well-defined subsets of HIV-infected individuals, they also have the expertise to apply state-of-the-art basic techniques in HIV pathogenesis, metabolomics, and redox signaling to test hypotheses. In parallel, the investigators are already conducting a prospective clinical trial of dietary zinc and S-adenosylmethionine (a thiol anti-oxidant that among its many actions increases the glutathione pool in the alveolar space) in HIV-infected individuals with inadequate immunological responses to ART (NCT01806870). This unique cohort will form the foundation for a greatly expanded clinical trial that will allow the investigators to test the corollary hypothesis that therapeutic strategies designed to improve zinc bioavailability and the redox potential within the alveolar space can enhance alveolar macrophage innate immune function and significantly decrease the HIV reservoir in the lung. This project will produce novel insights into how we can target the alveolar macrophage pool to decrease HIV burden as well as improve lung health in these vulnerable individuals.
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67 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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