Silvestri Guido, Paiardini Mirko, Pandrea Ivona, Lederman Michael M, Sodora Donald L
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA.
J Clin Invest. 2007 Nov;117(11):3148-54. doi: 10.1172/JCI33034.
In striking contrast to HIV infection, natural SIV infection of African nonhuman primates is asymptomatic and usually does not induce significant CD4+ T cell depletion despite high levels of virus replication. Recently, significant progress has been made in understanding the mechanisms underlying the remarkable difference in infection outcome between natural and nonnatural HIV/SIV hosts. These advances include the identification of limited immune activation as a key factor protecting natural SIV hosts from AIDS and the discovery of low CC chemokine receptor 5 expression on CD4+ T cells as a specific and consistent immunologic feature in these animals. Further elucidation of the pathways by which the differences in immune activation between natural and nonnatural hosts are manifest holds promise for the design of novel therapeutic approaches to HIV infection.
与HIV感染形成鲜明对比的是,非洲非人灵长类动物的自然SIV感染是无症状的,尽管病毒复制水平很高,但通常不会导致显著的CD4+ T细胞耗竭。最近,在理解自然和非自然HIV/SIV宿主之间感染结果显著差异的潜在机制方面取得了重大进展。这些进展包括确定有限的免疫激活是保护自然SIV宿主免于患艾滋病的关键因素,以及发现CD4+ T细胞上低水平的CC趋化因子受体5表达是这些动物的一种特定且一致的免疫特征。进一步阐明自然宿主和非自然宿主之间免疫激活差异的表现途径,有望为设计针对HIV感染的新型治疗方法提供思路。