The mucosal immune system is intricate and complex and relies on a balance of multiple cell types to maintain homeostasis and to function appropriately
1, 2. The tight epithelial barrier of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract functions to prevent commensal organisms and pathogens crossing from the intestinal lumen into circulation, while allowing nutrients to be absorbed
3. An important role for mucosal T cells in maintaining GI tract function has recently been highlighted by numerous studies dedicated to a newly identified subset of CD4+ T cells, Th17 cells, which are found most prominently in the GI tract
4-10. These T cells produce IL-17, which is important in adaptive immunity against extracellular bacteria and fungi, recruite neutrophils, induce defensin production, promote enterocyte homeostasis, and are important for maintenance of epithelial tight junctions in mucosal tissues
11-16. However, Th17 cells have also been implicated as potent inducers of tissue inflammation in several GI disorders such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, which result from a chronic inflammatory state associated with infiltration of inflammatory immune cells and damage to the gut epithelium
17-21. Specifically, an increased frequency of IL-17 producing cells in the GI tract has been directly associated with inflamed mucosa in inflammatory bowel diseases
13, 20, 22-24. Thus, dysregulation of mucosal associated lymphoid tissues (MALT) can lead to pathogenic consequences.
Dysfunction of the mucosal immune system has also been demonstrated in chronic viral infections, particularly during HIV/SIV pathogenesis. HIV and SIV infections are characterized by chronic virus replication and depletion of CD4+ T cells, ultimately resulting in opportunistic infections and progression to AIDS. Because HIV/SIV preferentially infects CD4+CCR5+ T cells, which are enriched in mucosal tissues, there is a rapid and severe depletion of CD4+ T cells in MALT during acute infection
25-29. However, CD4 depletion alone is not sufficient to cause AIDS
27, 30-32. Rather, the strongest predictor of disease progression is the extent of chronic, systemic immune activation associated with HIV pathogenesis
33. This systemic immune activation is characterized by increased cell proliferation, high rates of lymphocyte apoptosis, cell cycle dysregulation, and increased levels of proinflammatory cytokines
34-36. Massive infection of CD4+ T cells in MALT early in HIV/SIV infections is directly associated with inflammation and a breakdown of the mucosal integrity; this allows microbial products to translocate from the lumen of the GI tract into the peripheral circulation
26, 37-43. Translocation of microbial products during HIV/SIV infections, demonstrated by an increase in plasma lipopolysacharide (LPS) and bacterial DNA levels, is associated with systemic immune activation
26, 37-42. The gastrointestinal pathology associated with HIV/SIV infections includes significant enterocyte apoptosis, enteropathy of the MALT, as well as increased levels of inflammation and decreased levels of mucosal repair and regeneration
44-46. However the mechanisms underlying the damage to the GI tract are not well understood and clarifying to what extent structural and/or immunolgical damage to the GI tract and microbial translocation underlies immune activation is vital to characterizing the interactions between the MALT and peripheral immune system.
Non-human primate (NHP) models are essential to better understand how and to what extent dysfunction and damage to the mucosal immune system affects systemic immune activation
in vivo. Pathogenic SIV infection of Asian rhesus macaques (RM;
Macaca mulatta) is the most widely studied NHP model for HIV pathogenesis to date. In this model, infection of RM with SIVmac strains (derived from SIVsmm) recapitulates many key features of HIV infection in humans
47-49, including rapid and severe depletion of CD4+ T cells in mucosal tissues during acute infection, progressive loss of CD4+ T cells in periphery during chronic infection, high viral load, high levels of immune activation, and microbial translocation
34, 37, 47, 48, 50, 51. Another important model for HIV infection is SIV infection of pigtail macaques (PTM;
Macaca nemestrina). Like RM, after SIV infection, PTM lose CD4+ T cells, have high levels of immune activation, and progress to AIDS
52-54. These animals are of particular interest, in that PTM typically progress to AIDS more rapidly than RM
55, 56. After infection with SIVsmE543, the majority of PTM progress to AIDS within 6 months after infection (as opposed to approximately 2 years for RM)
55, 56. This rapid disease progression observed in PTM is not associated with virus inoculation, but is likely due to host factors
56-58. Interestingly, uninfected PTM in captivity have an increased incidence of diarrhea and GI diseases, and older animals frequenctly present with systemic amyloidosis
59, 60. Indeed, in 47 SIV-uninfected PTM in our animal facility that have been followed for a minimum of five years, 24 animals (51.1%) have had histories of gastrointestinal disorders as defined by at least 2 bouts of diarrhea requiring treatment. In contrast, only 12 of 103 (11.6%) SIV-uninfected RM in our facility have had such disorders (
P<0.0001). Similar observations have also been made at two separate animal facilites across the world (Shiu-Lok Hu, University of Washington, and Stephen J. Kent, University of Melbourne; personal communication). Moreover, after certain SIV infections such as SIVPBj-14 infection, PTM are more susceptible than RM to death resulting from gastrointestinal distress
61. We hypothesized that the rapid disease progression observed in PTM after SIV infection may, in part, be due to pre-existing conditions that result in dysfunction and damage of the mucosal immune system leading to increased microbial translocation and consequent immune activation. To address this hypothesis, in this study we assessed the T cell immunophenotype, function and activation in multiple anatomical sites including blood, lymph nodes (LN), and tissues of the GI tract. We also determined the level of mucosal integrity, microbial translocation and immune activation in SIV-uninfected PTM in comparison to RM.