Pantaleo G, Fauci A S
Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1876, USA.
Annu Rev Immunol. 1995;13:487-512. doi: 10.1146/annurev.iy.13.040195.002415.
The typical course of HIV infection is characterized by multiple phases that occur over a period of eight to ten years. A critical event in the initial establishment of HIV infection is the localization of HIV in lymphoid organs that serve as major reservoirs for HIV and as primary sites for virus replication. Despite the fact that the majority of HIV-infected individuals do not show any clinical signs of disease activity for extended periods of time, HIV disease is active and progressive in lymphoid organs during this clinically latent period. Persistence of virus in lymphoid organs causes a chronic stimulation of the immune system that ultimately leads to destruction of the lymphoid tissue and loss of the ability to respond to HIV and/or other pathogens. Major expansions of restricted subsets of CD8+ T cells determined by the usage of certain variable domains (V) of the beta (beta) chain of the T cell receptor (TCR) occur in certain patients during primary HIV infection. These restricted expansions of CD8+ V beta subsets are oligoclonal and represent HIV-specific immune responses with cytolytic T cell activity. Although only limited numbers of patients were studied thus far, certain patterns have emerged that appear to correlate with the subsequent clinical outcome. It is conceivable that immunologic and virologic events associated with primary infection have a major impact on the ultimate course of HIV disease. Histopathologic, virologic, and immunologic studies of long-term nonprogressors (LTNP) indicate that a small proportion of patients who have been HIV-infected for approximately 10 years have normal lymph node architecture, brisk HIV-specific humoral and cellular immune responses, and high and stable CD4+ T cell counts serially determined over years. Viral burden and expression are low in these patients; however, low levels of viremia are present, and virus derived from mononuclear cells is replication competent and infectious in most patients. Studies of events associated with primary HIV infection, examination of lymphoid tissue at various stages of disease, and dissection of the immunologic and virologic components of LTNP should contribute substantially to our understanding of the pathogenesis of HIV disease.
HIV感染的典型病程具有多个阶段的特征,这些阶段会在八到十年的时间里出现。HIV感染初始确立过程中的一个关键事件是HIV在淋巴器官中的定位,淋巴器官是HIV的主要储存库以及病毒复制的主要场所。尽管大多数HIV感染者在很长一段时间内没有表现出任何疾病活动的临床症状,但在这个临床潜伏期,HIV疾病在淋巴器官中是活跃且进展性的。病毒在淋巴器官中的持续存在会导致免疫系统的慢性刺激,最终导致淋巴组织的破坏以及对HIV和/或其他病原体作出反应的能力丧失。在原发性HIV感染期间,某些患者会出现由T细胞受体(TCR)β链的某些可变区(V)的使用所决定的CD8 + T细胞受限亚群的主要扩增。这些CD8 + Vβ亚群的受限扩增是寡克隆性的,代表具有细胞毒性T细胞活性的HIV特异性免疫反应。尽管到目前为止仅研究了有限数量的患者,但已经出现了某些似乎与后续临床结果相关的模式。可以想象,与原发性感染相关的免疫和病毒学事件对HIV疾病的最终病程有重大影响。对长期不进展者(LTNP)的组织病理学、病毒学和免疫学研究表明,一小部分感染HIV约10年的患者具有正常的淋巴结结构、活跃的HIV特异性体液和细胞免疫反应,以及多年来连续测定的高且稳定的CD4 + T细胞计数。这些患者的病毒载量和表达水平较低;然而,存在低水平的病毒血症,并且来自单核细胞的病毒在大多数患者中具有复制能力且具有传染性。对与原发性HIV感染相关事件的研究、对疾病各个阶段淋巴组织的检查以及对LTNP的免疫和病毒学成分的剖析,应该会极大地有助于我们对HIV疾病发病机制的理解。