Most intriguing was the incidental observation that the duration

Most intriguing was the incidental observation that the duration of DMPA use prior

to HSV-2 challenge affected the immune response to future re-challenge. In an elegant study, mice immunized intravaginally with an attenuated AT13387 in vitro strain of HSV-2 following longer (15 days) exposure to DMPA (DMPA-15 group) failed to show protection when challenged with wild-type HSV-2 [112]. In contrast, mice that were immunized shortly after DMPA treatment (DMPA-5 group), were fully protected and showed no genital pathology after HSV-2 challenge. High viral replication titers, low levels of gamma interferon, dampening of TH1 responses, and poor specific antibody responses characterized the DMPA-15 group in contrast to the DMPA-5 group. These experiments demonstrate that duration of HC use may impact innate and acquired immune responses, thereby influencing the susceptibility to and course of the

infection. Far less is known about the impact of sex hormones on responses to vaccines in humans. A study by Johansson et al. highlights the potentially critical role of sex hormones: in 21 volunteers who received a mucosal vaccine containing cholera toxin B antigen, the investigators administered the vaccine either independently of the menstrual stage or on days 10 and 24 in the cycle in different groups of participants [113]. Vaginal selleck inhibitor and nasal vaccinations both resulted in significant IgA and IgG anti-cholera toxin B subunit responses in serum in the majority of the volunteers in the various vaccination groups. Only vaginal vaccination given on days 10 and 24 in the cycle induced strong specific antibody responses in the cervix. In another study, women who received the parenteral HPV vaccine Oxalosuccinic acid had the highest levels of cervical IgG and IgA detected during the follicular phase of the cycle,

and these levels decreased significantly around the time of ovulation [114]. In an era where much of the hope of future STI control lies in vaccine development, the effects of endogenous and exogenous sex hormones on mucosal and systemic immune responses must be critically evaluated. There are no studies that evaluate the association between the vaginal microbiota and successful vaccination. These studies are critical and could lead to a novel dual approach to STI prevention which integrates (1) vaccines and (2) control of the microbiota. To achieve these goals, continued efforts to better understand bacterial community dynamics over time (inter-bacterial and bacterial–host) are necessary. Such studies would lead to the development of interventions to maintain a healthy microbiota. For example, the development of personalized pre-biotics that would maintain a healthy vaginal microbiota, preventing adverse ecological shifts, or of probiotic mixtures that could seed a microbial community to restore and/or maintain a healthy environment, may be envisionned.

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