Literature DB >> 27515208

Recursion-based depletion of human immunodeficiency virus-specific naive CD4(+) T cells may facilitate persistent viral replication and chronic viraemia leading to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

Tetsuo Tsukamoto1, Hiroyuki Yamamoto2, Seiji Okada3, Tetsuro Matano4.   

Abstract

Although antiretroviral therapy has made human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection a controllable disease, it is still unclear how viral replication persists in untreated patients and causes CD4(+) T-cell depletion leading to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in several years. Theorists tried to explain it with the diversity threshold theory in which accumulated mutations in the HIV genome make the virus so diverse that the immune system will no longer be able to recognize all the variants and fail to control the viraemia. Although the theory could apply to a number of cases, macaque AIDS models using simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) have shown that failed viral control at the set point is not always associated with T-cell escape mutations. Moreover, even monkeys without a protective major histocompatibility complex (MHC) allele can contain replication of a super infected SIV following immunization with a live-attenuated SIV vaccine, while those animals are not capable of fighting primary SIV infection. Here we propose a recursion-based virus-specific naive CD4(+) T-cell depletion hypothesis through thinking on what may happen in individuals experiencing primary immunodeficiency virus infection. This could explain the mechanism for impairment of virus-specific immune response in the course of HIV infection.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27515208     DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2016.06.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hypotheses        ISSN: 0306-9877            Impact factor:   1.538


  3 in total

1.  CD8+ Cytotoxic-T-Lymphocyte Breadth Could Facilitate Early Immune Detection of Immunodeficiency Virus-Derived Epitopes with Limited Expression Levels.

Authors:  Tetsuo Tsukamoto; Hiroyuki Yamamoto; Tetsuro Matano
Journal:  mSphere       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 4.389

Review 2.  Gene Therapy Approaches to Functional Cure and Protection of Hematopoietic Potential in HIV Infection.

Authors:  Tetsuo Tsukamoto
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2019-03-11       Impact factor: 6.321

3.  HIV Impacts CD34+ Progenitors Involved in T-Cell Differentiation During Coculture With Mouse Stromal OP9-DL1 Cells.

Authors:  Tetsuo Tsukamoto
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2019-01-29       Impact factor: 7.561

  3 in total

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