Pantaleo G, Demarest J F, Schacker T, Vaccarezza M, Cohen O J, Daucher M, Graziosi C, Schnittman S S, Quinn T C, Shaw G M, Perrin L, Tambussi G, Lazzarin A, Sekaly R P, Soudeyns H, Corey L, Fauci A S
Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997 Jan 7;94(1):254-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.94.1.254.
Following infection of the host with a virus, the delicate balance between virus replication/spread and the immune response to the virus determines the outcome of infection, i.e., persistence versus elimination of the virus. It is unclear, however, what relative roles immunologic and virologic factors play during primary viral infection in determining the subsequent clinical outcome. By studying a cohort of subjects with primary HIV infection, it has been demonstrated that qualitative differences in the primary immune response to HIV, but not quantitative differences in the initial levels of viremia are associated with different clinical outcomes.
宿主感染病毒后,病毒复制/传播与针对该病毒的免疫反应之间的微妙平衡决定了感染的结果,即病毒的持续存在与清除。然而,尚不清楚免疫因素和病毒学因素在原发性病毒感染期间对决定后续临床结果发挥何种相对作用。通过对一组原发性HIV感染患者的研究表明,对HIV的原发性免疫反应的质的差异而非病毒血症初始水平的量的差异与不同的临床结果相关。