Division of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Immunology Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave Levy Place, Box 1630, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Immunol Res. 2012 Dec;54(1-3):133-9. doi: 10.1007/s12026-012-8320-8.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is the cause of a modern global pandemic associated with progressive acquired immune deficiency. The infection is characterized by the loss of the primary target of viral infection, the CD4+ T cell. The measurement of plasma viremia in patients can predict the rate of CD4+ cell decline; however, it is not clear whether this cell-free plasma virus represents the engine that drives viral spread. Active viral replication is mainly observed within lymphoid tissues that are hotbeds of cell-cell interactions that initiate and organize immune responses. It is well established that cell-cell interactions enhance viral spread in vitro. Dendritic cell-T cell interactions, which lie at the heart of adaptive immune responses, enhance viral infection in vitro. Interactions between infected and uninfected CD4+ T cells are a dominant route of viral spread in vitro and are likely to play a central role in viral dissemination in vivo. Future studies will test existing paradigms of HIV-1 dissemination to determine whether virus-transmitting contacts between infected and uninfected T cells called virological synapses are the dominant mode of viral spread in vivo. Here, we review the status of our understanding of this mode of infection with a focus on T cell-T cell interactions and examine how it may explain resistance to neutralizing antibodies and or the generation of genetic diversity of HIV.
人类免疫缺陷病毒 1 型是一种现代全球大流行疾病的病原体,与进行性获得性免疫缺陷有关。该感染的特征是病毒感染的主要靶标 CD4+ T 细胞的丧失。测量患者血浆中的病毒血症可以预测 CD4+细胞下降的速度;然而,尚不清楚这种无细胞的血浆病毒是否代表驱动病毒传播的引擎。病毒的复制主要发生在淋巴组织中,这些组织是细胞间相互作用的热点,这些相互作用启动并组织免疫反应。已经证实细胞间相互作用增强了体外的病毒传播。树突状细胞与 T 细胞的相互作用是适应性免疫反应的核心,增强了体外的病毒感染。体外感染的和未感染的 CD4+ T 细胞之间的相互作用是病毒传播的主要途径,并且可能在体内病毒传播中发挥核心作用。未来的研究将检验 HIV-1 传播的现有范例,以确定在体内病毒传播中是否存在感染和未感染的 T 细胞之间的病毒转移接触,称为病毒突触,这是病毒传播的主要模式。在这里,我们回顾了我们对这种感染模式的理解现状,重点关注 T 细胞- T 细胞相互作用,并探讨它如何解释对中和抗体的抗性,或 HIV 的遗传多样性的产生。