Haase A T
Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Annu Rev Immunol. 1999;17:625-56. doi: 10.1146/annurev.immunol.17.1.625.
Human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) is usually transmitted through sexual contact and in the very early stages of infection establishes a persistent infection in lymphatic tissues (LT). Virus is produced and stored at this site in a dynamic process that slowly depletes the immune system of CD4+ T cells, setting the stage for AIDS. In this review, I describe the changes in viral and CD4+ T cell populations in LT over the course of infection and after treatment. I present recent evidence that productively infected CD4+ T cells play an important role in establishing persistent infection from the onset, and that the LT are the major reservoir where virus is produced and stored on follicular dendritic cells (FDCs). I discuss the methods used to define the size of viral and CD4+ T cell populations in LT and the nature of virus-host cell interactions in vivo. These experimental approaches have identified populations of latently and chronically infected cells in which virus can elude host defenses, perpetuate infection, and escape eradication by highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART). I discuss the dramatic impact of HAART on suppressing virus production, reducing the pool of stored virus, and restoring CD4+ T cell populations. I discuss the contributions of thymopoiesis and other renewal mechanisms, lymphatic homeostasis and trafficking to these changes in CD4+ T cell populations in LT, and conclude with a model of immune depletion and repopulation based on the limited regenerative capacity of the adult and the uncompensated losses of productively infected cells that treatment stems. The prediction of this model is that immune regeneration will be slow, variable, and partial. It is nonetheless encouraging to know that even in late stages of infection, control of active replication of HIV-1 provides an opportunity for the immune system to recover from the injuries inflicted by infection.
人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)通常通过性接触传播,在感染的最初阶段就在淋巴组织(LT)中建立持续性感染。病毒在这个部位产生并储存,这是一个动态过程,会缓慢耗尽免疫系统中的CD4+T细胞,为艾滋病的发生奠定基础。在这篇综述中,我描述了感染过程中和治疗后LT中病毒和CD4+T细胞群体的变化。我展示了最近的证据,即高效感染的CD4+T细胞从一开始就在建立持续性感染中发挥重要作用,并且LT是病毒在滤泡树突状细胞(FDC)上产生和储存的主要储存库。我讨论了用于确定LT中病毒和CD4+T细胞群体大小的方法以及体内病毒-宿主细胞相互作用的性质。这些实验方法已经确定了潜伏和慢性感染细胞群体,其中病毒可以逃避宿主防御、使感染持续存在并通过高效抗逆转录病毒治疗(HAART)逃脱根除。我讨论了HAART在抑制病毒产生、减少储存病毒库以及恢复CD4+T细胞群体方面的显著影响。我讨论了胸腺生成和其他更新机制、淋巴内环境稳定和运输对LT中CD4+T细胞群体这些变化的贡献,并基于成年人有限的再生能力以及治疗所导致的高效感染细胞的未补偿损失,得出了一个免疫耗竭和再填充模型。该模型的预测是免疫再生将是缓慢、可变且部分的。然而,令人鼓舞的是,即使在感染后期,控制HIV-1的活跃复制也为免疫系统从感染造成的损伤中恢复提供了机会。