
June 2003 Cover
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Laboratory studies of mouth tissue suggest that unprotected oral sex does have the potential to transmit HIV, but one expert said it is still less risky than other routes of transmission.
Dr. Xuan Liu of Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science and colleagues at the University of California-Los Angeles obtained oral tissue samples from over 50 healthy,
HIV- negative patients and exposed the tissue to three different types of HIV. They found that two of the types could infect and reproduce within keratinocytes that line the mouth's
surface, and then transfer the infection to adjacent white blood cells. However, the level of infection in the mouth cells was much lower than that seen in white blood cells--approximately
one-fourth to one-eighth lower.
"HIV is able to get into [keratinocytes], but it reproduces less than it would in blood cells... because saliva contains an HIV inhibitor," said Liu.
Researchers found that keratinocytes have two receptors that bind to HIV. However, when the team used inhibitors to block HIV from attaching to those receptors, they noticed
that they did not completely block transmission, suggesting that the cells may have lower levels of other receptors used by the virus.
Dr. Jeffrey Laurence, senior scientific consultant for the American Foundation for AIDS Research, said that keratinocytes lack two of the most common receptors for HIV
transmission--CD4 and the CCR5 co-receptor. An effective vaccine would likely have to block these two primary receptors, which are found in cells that line the vagina and rectum.
Editor's Note: from Reuters Health
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