HIV Can Penetrate a Woman's Healthy Genital Skin
Posted by US News and World Report (HealthDay News) December 16, 2008: Study finds virus can reach immune cells in just 4 hours
http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/healthday/2008/12/16/hiv-can-penetrate-a-womans-healthy-genital-skin.html
(HealthDay News) -- A new route of male-to-female transmission of HIV
-- in which the virus can travel through healthy genital skin to reach
immune cells in just four hours -- has been identified by U.S.
researchers.
It's long been believed that the normal lining of the vaginal tract was
an effective barrier to HIV during sexual intercourse, because the
large HIV virus couldn't penetrate the tissue. But the Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine researchers found that HIV can
penetrate normal, healthy genital tissue to a depth where it can get to
immune cells and infect them.
The researchers labeled HIV viruses with photo-activated fluorescent
tags and were able to track the viruses as they penetrated the
outermost lining of the female genital tract (the squamous epithelium)
in female human tissue obtained through hysterectomy and in animal
models.
The findings were expected to be presented Dec. 16 at the American
Society for Cell Biology annual meeting, in San Francisco.
"This is an unexpected and important result. We have a new
understanding of how HIV can invade the female genital tract,"
principal investigator Thomas Hope, a professor of cell and molecular
biology, said in a university news release.
"Until now, science has really had no idea about the details of how
sexual transmission of HIV actually works. The mechanism was all very
murky," Hope said.
These findings, if confirmed in future studies, could help in the
development of new microbicides and vaccines to protect women against
HIV.
"We urgently need new prevention strategies or therapeutics to block
the entry of HIV through a woman's genital skin," said Hope. While
condoms are 100 percent effective in blocking HIV, "people don't always
use them for cultural and other reasons."
Women account for 26 percent of all new HIV cases in the United States,
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Based
on its most recent analysis of 2005 data, the CDC estimated that there
were 56,300 new HIV infections that year, and 31 percent were due to
high-risk heterosexual contact. More than half of the new cases of HIV
infection worldwide are in women.

