Kolenda-Roberts Holly M, Kuhnt Leah A, Jennings Ryan N, Mergia Ayalew, Gengozian Nazareth, Johnson Calvin M
Department of Infectious Diseases and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Front Biosci. 2007 May 1;12:3668-82. doi: 10.2741/2343.
The global incidence of pediatric HIV infection is estimated at 2.3 million children, most acquiring the infection from their mothers in utero, peripartum, or postpartum. Pediatric HIV infection typically causes a rapidly progressive disease when compared with adult infection, due in part to the profound susceptibility of the neonatal thymus to productive infection or degenerative changes. Failed production of naive T-lymphocytes further limits the success of antiviral therapy to restore immunologic function. In this review, we explore the use of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection of domestic cats as an animal model for pediatric HIV infection. Cats infected with FIV represent the smallest host of a naturally occurring lentivirus, and the immunodeficiency syndrome elicited by FIV infection is similar to that of HIV-AIDS. The feline-FIV model uniquely reproduces several key aspects of immunosuppressive lentivirus infection of the thymus, allowing investigators to define viral determinants of pathogenicity, influence of host age on disease outcome, and therapeutic strategies to restore thymus function.
据估计,全球儿童艾滋病毒感染的发病率为230万例,其中大多数儿童是在子宫内、围产期或产后从母亲那里感染的。与成人感染相比,儿童艾滋病毒感染通常会引发一种快速进展的疾病,部分原因是新生儿胸腺对 productive 感染或退行性变化极为敏感。幼稚T淋巴细胞生成失败进一步限制了抗病毒治疗恢复免疫功能的成功率。在本综述中,我们探讨了将家猫感染猫免疫缺陷病毒(FIV)作为儿童艾滋病毒感染的动物模型。感染FIV的猫是自然发生的慢病毒的最小宿主,FIV感染引发的免疫缺陷综合征与艾滋病毒-艾滋病相似。猫-FIV模型独特地再现了胸腺免疫抑制慢病毒感染的几个关键方面,使研究人员能够确定致病性的病毒决定因素、宿主年龄对疾病结果的影响以及恢复胸腺功能的治疗策略。