Gray C M, Puren A J
AIDS Research Unit, National Institute for Virology, Sandringham, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz). 2000;48(4):235-41.
According to the latest UNAIDS figures for 1999 there were an estimated 30.6 million people living with HIV-1, with 16,000 new HIV infections per day. The only global strategy of combating new HIV infections is to make a vaccine that is affordable to developing countries, where greater than 90% of new infections occur, and that has enough efficacy to interrupt high rates of transmission. This review critically examines: 1) important immune parameters that should be considered which will allow an understanding of preventative vaccine design and 2) the mechanisms underlying immune destruction during HIV-1 infection that will facilitate design of therapeutic vaccines. A realistic goal of a preventative vaccine is to elicit protective immune responses in vaccinees that would prevent HIV-1 from replicating extensively in the host. Components of protective immunity are thought to include neutralizing antibodies (NAB) and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Rethinking vaccine strategies has to take into account that HIV-1 vaccines must elicit primary cellular and humoral immunity via dendritic cell and Langerhan cell priming. It is only under these conditions that boosting immunity with subsequent vaccinations will allow high enough CTL effector cells and NAB titres to impede or to prevent HIV-1 replication. Success of therapeutic vaccine strategies, has to take into consideration the pathology of persistent immune stimulation by chronic HIV-1 infection. To re-stimulate immunity and re-direct immune responses, chronic immune stimulation by HIV-1 has to be alleviated by reducing high levels of viral antigen presentation by suppressing virus with antiretroviral agents. Such treatment courses may only have to be transient, long enough for immunity to respond to an immunogenic stimulus. Short-course drug therapy may then be an affordable option for many countries already carrying a high burden of HIV-1/AIDS.
根据联合国艾滋病规划署(UNAIDS)1999年的最新数据估计,全球约有3060万人感染了HIV-1,每天新增16000例HIV感染病例。对抗新增HIV感染的唯一全球策略是研发一种发展中国家能够负担得起的疫苗,因为超过90%的新增感染病例发生在这些国家,而且该疫苗必须具有足够的效力以阻断高传播率。本综述批判性地审视了:1)在预防性疫苗设计中应考虑的重要免疫参数,这些参数有助于理解预防性疫苗的设计;2)HIV-1感染期间免疫破坏的潜在机制,这将有助于治疗性疫苗的设计。预防性疫苗的一个现实目标是在接种疫苗者体内引发保护性免疫反应,以防止HIV-1在宿主体内大量复制。保护性免疫的组成部分被认为包括中和抗体(NAB)和细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(CTL)。重新思考疫苗策略必须考虑到,HIV-1疫苗必须通过树突状细胞和朗格汉斯细胞的启动来引发主要的细胞免疫和体液免疫。只有在这些条件下,后续接种疫苗增强免疫力才能产生足够高的CTL效应细胞和NAB滴度,以阻碍或防止HIV-1复制。治疗性疫苗策略的成功必须考虑到慢性HIV-1感染导致的持续免疫刺激的病理情况。为了重新刺激免疫力并重新引导免疫反应,必须通过使用抗逆转录病毒药物抑制病毒,降低高水平的病毒抗原呈递,从而减轻HIV-1的慢性免疫刺激。这样的治疗疗程可能只需短暂进行,时间长度足以使免疫系统对免疫原性刺激做出反应。对于许多已经承受着高负担HIV-1/艾滋病的国家来说,短期药物治疗可能是一种经济实惠的选择。