Immunopathogenesis of acute AIDS virus infection

被引:111
作者
Picker, Louis J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Oregon Hlth Sci Univ, Vaccine & Gene Therapy Inst, Beaverton, OR 97006 USA
[2] Oregon Hlth Sci Univ, Natl Primate Res Ctr, Beaverton, OR 97006 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.coi.2006.05.001
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
The pathogenesis of chronic HIV infection has long been envisioned as a slow process of immune degradation ultimately leading to overt immune deficiency and AIDS. However, recent studies suggest that the massive viral replication of acute infection initiates the pathogenic process, significantly degrading the immune system and setting up a sequence of events that years later leads to final decompensation and AIDS. The central player of the disease process appears to be the CD4(+) effector memory T cell population that resides in the extra-lymphoid immune effector sites of the body (e.g. gut, lung and genital tract), and has a crucial role in maintaining immune competence at the tissue-external environment interface. HIV and its monkey counterpart SIV specifically target these CCR5-expressing T cells, significantly depleting them in acute infection and, in AIDS-susceptible species (humans, Asian macaques), initiating and maintaining a state of hyperactivation that undermines their regeneration. With time, uncontrolled viral replication leads to loss of these cells in tissue below a crucial threshold, resulting in increased susceptibility to opportunistic infection.
引用
收藏
页码:399 / 405
页数:7
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [1] HIV disease: fallout from a mucosal catastrophe?
    Brenchley, JM
    Price, DA
    Douek, DC
    [J]. NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2006, 7 (03) : 235 - 239
  • [2] CD4+ T cell depletion during all stages of HIV disease occurs predominantly in the gastrointestinal tract
    Brenchley, JM
    Schacker, TW
    Ruff, LE
    Price, DA
    Taylor, JH
    Beilman, GJ
    Nguyen, PL
    Khoruts, A
    Larson, M
    Haase, AT
    Douek, DC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2004, 200 (06) : 749 - 759
  • [3] Immune activation set point during early FHV infection predicts subsequent CD4+ T-cell changes independent of viral load
    Deeks, SG
    Kitchen, CMR
    Liu, L
    Guo, H
    Gascon, R
    Narváez, AB
    Hunt, P
    Martin, JN
    Kahn, JO
    Levy, J
    McGrath, MS
    Hecht, FM
    [J]. BLOOD, 2004, 104 (04) : 942 - 947
  • [4] Chemokine receptors and HIV entry
    Doms, RW
    [J]. AIDS, 2001, 15 : S34 - S35
  • [5] T cell dynamics in HIV-1 infection
    Douek, DC
    Picker, LJ
    Koup, RA
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 21 : 265 - 304
  • [6] Depletion of regulatory T cells in HIV infection is associated with immune activation
    Eggena, MP
    Barugahare, B
    Jones, N
    Okello, M
    Mutalya, S
    Kityo, C
    Mugyenyi, P
    Cao, HY
    [J]. JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2005, 174 (07) : 4407 - 4414
  • [7] Short- and long-term clinical outcomes in rhesus monkeys inoculated with a highly pathogenic chimeric simian/human immunodeficiency virus
    Endo, Y
    Igarashi, T
    Nishimura, Y
    Buckler, C
    Buckler-White, A
    Plishka, R
    Dimitrov, DS
    Martin, MA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2000, 74 (15) : 6935 - 6945
  • [8] Shorter survival in advanced human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection is more closely associated with T lymphocyte activation than with plasma virus burden or virus chemokine coreceptor usage
    Giorgi, JV
    Hultin, LE
    McKeating, JA
    Johnson, TD
    Owens, B
    Jacobson, LP
    Shih, R
    Lewis, J
    Wiley, DJ
    Phair, JP
    Wolinsky, SM
    Detels, R
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1999, 179 (04) : 859 - 870
  • [9] Pathogenesis of HIV infection: what the virus spares is as important as what it destroys
    Grossman, Z
    Meier-Schellersheim, M
    Paul, WE
    Picker, LJ
    [J]. NATURE MEDICINE, 2006, 12 (03) : 289 - 295
  • [10] Severe CD4+ T-cell depletion in gut lymphoid tissue during primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection and substantial delay in restoration following highly active antiretroviral therapy
    Guadalupe, M
    Reay, E
    Sankaran, S
    Prindiville, T
    Flamm, J
    McNeil, A
    Dandekar, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2003, 77 (21) : 11708 - 11717