Monceaux V, Viollet L, Petit F, Cumont M C, Kaufmann G R, Aubertin A M, Hurtrel B, Silvestri G, Estaquier J
Unité de Physiopathologie des Infections Lentivirales, Institut Pasteur, 28 rue du Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris cedex 15, France.
J Virol. 2007 Dec;81(24):13865-75. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00452-07. Epub 2007 Sep 26.
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection of rhesus macaques (RMs) provides a reliable model to study the relationship between lentivirus replication, cellular immune responses, and CD4+ T-cell dynamics. Here we investigated, using SIVmac251-infected RMs of a Chinese genetic background (which experience a slower disease progression than Indian RMs), the dynamics of CD4+ CCR5+ T cells, as this subset of memory/activated CD4+ T cells is both a preferential target of virus replication and a marker of immune activation. As expected, we observed that the number of circulating CD4+ CCR5+ T cells decreases transiently at the time of peak viremia. However, at 60 days postinfection, i.e., when set-point viremia is established, the level of CD4+ CCR5+ T cells was increased compared to the baseline level. Interestingly, this increase correlated with faster disease progression, higher plasma viremia, and early loss of CD4+ T-cell function, as measured by CD4+ T-cell count, the fraction of memory CD4+ T cells, and the recall response to purified protein derivative. Taken together, these data show a key difference between the dynamics of the CD4+ CCR5+ T-cell pool (and its relationship with disease progression) in Chinese RMs and those described in previous reports for Indian SIVmac251-infected RMs. As the SIV-associated changes in the CD4+ CCR5+ T-cell pool reflect the opposing forces of SIV replication (which reduces this cellular pool) and immune activation (which increases it), our data suggest that in SIV-infected Chinese RMs the impact of immune activation is more prominent than that of virus replication in determining the size of the pool of CD4+ CCR5+ T cells in the periphery. As progression of HIV infection in humans also is associated with a relative expansion of the level of CD4+ CCR5+ T cells, we propose that SIV infection of Chinese RMs is a very valuable and important animal model for understanding the pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus infection.
恒河猴感染猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)为研究慢病毒复制、细胞免疫反应和CD4+ T细胞动态变化之间的关系提供了一个可靠的模型。在此,我们利用感染了SIVmac251的具有中国遗传背景的恒河猴(其疾病进展比印度恒河猴慢),研究了CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞的动态变化,因为这一记忆/活化CD4+ T细胞亚群既是病毒复制的优先靶标,也是免疫激活的标志物。正如预期的那样,我们观察到在病毒血症高峰期,循环CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞数量会短暂减少。然而,在感染后60天,即设定点病毒血症建立时,CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞水平相较于基线水平有所升高。有趣的是,这种升高与更快的疾病进展、更高的血浆病毒血症以及CD4+ T细胞功能的早期丧失相关,CD4+ T细胞功能通过CD4+ T细胞计数、记忆CD4+ T细胞比例以及对纯化蛋白衍生物的回忆反应来衡量。综上所述,这些数据表明中国恒河猴中CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞库的动态变化(及其与疾病进展的关系)与先前报道的印度SIVmac251感染恒河猴存在关键差异。由于CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞库中与SIV相关的变化反映了SIV复制(会减少这一细胞库)和免疫激活(会增加这一细胞库)这两种相反的力量,我们的数据表明,在感染SIV的中国恒河猴中,在决定外周血CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞库大小方面,免疫激活的影响比病毒复制更为突出。由于人类HIV感染的进展也与CD4+ CCR5+ T细胞水平的相对增加有关,我们提出中国恒河猴感染SIV是理解人类免疫缺陷病毒感染发病机制的一个非常有价值且重要的动物模型。