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Medical UV Exposures and HIV Activation
Author(s) -
Zmudzka Barbara Z.,
Miller Sharon A.,
Jacobs Mary E.,
Beer Janusz Z.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1996.tb02453.x
Subject(s) - pyrimidine dimer , stratum corneum , puva therapy , human skin , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , dermatology , chemistry , medicine , biology , dna , immunology , biochemistry , genetics , pathology , dna damage , psoriasis
This paper presents the first attempt to evaluate the potential of clinical UV exposures to induce the human immunodeficiency (HIV) promoter and, thus, to upregulate HIV growth in those skin cells that are directly affected by the exposure. Using the data for HIV promoter activation in vitro , we computed UVB and psoralen plus UVA (PUVA) doses that produce 50% of the maximal promoter activation (AD 50 ). Then, using (a) literature data for UV transmittance in the human skin, (b) a composite action spectrum for HIV promoter and pyrimidine dimer induction by UVB and (c) an action spectrum for DNA synthesis inhibition by PUVA, we estimated the distribution of medical UVB and PUVA doses in the skin. This allowed us to estimate how deep into the skin the HIV‐activating doses might penetrate in an initial and an advanced stage of UVB or PUVA therapy. Such analysis was done for normal type II skin and for single exposures. The results allow us to predict where in the skin the HIV promoter may be induced by selected small and large therapeutic UVB or PUVA doses. To accommodate changes in skin topography due to disease and UV therapy, our considerations would require further refinements. For UVB we found that, when the incident dose on the surface of the skin is 500 J/m 2 (290–320nm) (initial stage of the therapy), the dose producing 50% of the maximal HIV promoter activation (AD UVB 50 ) is limited to the stratum corneum. However, with an incident dose of 5000 J/m 2 (an advanced stage of the therapy), AD UVB 50 may be delivered as far as the living cells of the epidermis and even to some parts of the upper dermis. For PUVA we found that, when the incident UVA doses are 25 or 100 kJ/m 2 (320–400nm) (an initial and an advanced stage of therapy, respectively), and the 8‐methoxypsoralen concentration in the blood is 0.1 μg/mL (the desired level), the combined doses to the mid epidermis (and some areas of the upper dermis) are well below the 50% HIV promoter‐activating PUVA dose (AD PUVA 50 ). Only under the worst scenario conditions, i. e. an exceptionally high drug concentration in the patient's tissues and localization of HIV in the nearest proximity to the skin surface, would the combined PUVA dose expected during photochemotherapy exceed AD PUVA 50 . These results suggest that the probability of HIV activation in the epidermis by direct mechanisms is higher for UVB than for PUVA treatment. However, complexities of the UV‐inducible HIV activation and immunomodulatory phenomena are such that our results by themselves should not be taken as an indication that UVB therapy carries a higher risk than PUVA therapy when administered to HIV‐infected patients.