Kulkarni Prasad S, Butera Salvatore T, Duerr Ann C
HIV and Retrovirology Branch, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, NE, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
AIDS Rev. 2003 Apr-Jun;5(2):87-103.
The medical, social, and economic impact of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic has underscored the need to quickly develop effective control strategies. Vigorous efforts to develop a vaccine and therapeutic agents have not yet succeeded in containing the spread of the virus. Studies of persons who remain uninfected despite extensive exposure to HIV continue to provide valuable information on mechanisms of natural protection, which can then be applied to vaccine design. Natural resistance to infection has been studied in multiple high-risk cohorts, with resistance attributed to a combination of innate, genetic, and acquired immune system-mediated mechanisms. The relative contributions of these factors to natural resistance to HIV-1 infection and possible ways in which they can be applied to vaccine design are discussed.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)流行对医学、社会和经济造成的影响凸显了迅速制定有效控制策略的必要性。大力研发疫苗和治疗药物的努力尚未成功遏制该病毒的传播。对尽管广泛接触HIV但仍未感染的人群进行的研究持续提供有关自然保护机制的宝贵信息,这些信息随后可应用于疫苗设计。在多个高危队列中对感染的自然抵抗力进行了研究,将抵抗力归因于先天、遗传和后天免疫系统介导机制的综合作用。本文讨论了这些因素对HIV-1感染自然抵抗力的相对贡献以及将其应用于疫苗设计的可能方式。