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Vaginal lactic acid elicits an anti-inflammatory response from human cervicovaginal epithelial cells and inhibits production of pro-inflammatory mediators associated with HIV acquisition

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 08:45 authored by Anna Hearps, David Tyssen, D Srbinovski, L Bayigga, D Diaz, Muriel Aldunate, R Cone, Raffi Gugasyan, D Anderson, Gilda Tachedjian
Inflammation in the female reproductive tract (FRT) is associated with increased HIV transmission. Lactobacillus spp. dominate the vaginal microbiota of many women and their presence is associated with reduced HIV acquisition. Here we demonstrate that lactic acid (LA), a major organic acid metabolite produced by lactobacilli, mediates anti-inflammatory effects on human cervicovaginal epithelial cells. Treatment of human vaginal and cervical epithelial cell lines with LA (pH 3.9) elicited significant increases in the production of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-1RA. When added simultaneously or prior to stimulation, LA inhibited the Toll-like receptor agonist-elicited production of inflammatory mediators IL-6, IL-8, TNFα, RANTES, and MIP3α from epithelial cell lines and prevented IL-6 and IL-8 production by seminal plasma. The anti-inflammatory effect of LA was mediated by the protonated form present at pH≤3.86 and was observed with both L- and D-isomers. A similar anti-inflammatory effect of LA was observed in primary cervicovaginal cells and in an organotypic epithelial tissue model. These findings identify a novel property of LA that acts directly on epithelial cells to inhibit FRT inflammation and highlights the potential use of LA-containing agents in the lower FRT as adjuncts to female-initiated strategies to reduce HIV acquisition.

Funding

Immune modulatory effects of vaginal microbiota metabolites and HIV susceptibility

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Journal

Mucosal Immunology

Volume

10

Issue

6

Start page

1480

End page

1490

Total pages

11

Publisher

Nature

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 The Author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Former Identifier

2006080700

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-07-08

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