Limited CD4+ T cell proliferation leads to preservation of CD4+ T cell counts in SIV-infected sooty mangabeys |
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Authors: | Ming Liang Chan Janka Petravic Alexandra M. Ortiz Jessica Engram Mirko Paiardini Deborah Cromer Guido Silvestri Miles P. Davenport |
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Affiliation: | 1.Complex Systems in Biology Group, Centre for Vascular Research, University of New South Wales, Kensington, NSW, Australia;2.Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, PA, USA;3.Department of Mathematics and Centre for Integrative Systems Biology, Imperial College London, London, UK;4.Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA |
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Abstract: | Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections result in chronic virus replication and progressive depletion of CD4+ T cells, leading to immunodeficiency and death. In contrast, ‘natural hosts’ of SIV experience persistent infection with high virus replication but no severe CD4+ T cell depletion, and remain AIDS-free. One important difference between pathogenic and non-pathogenic infections is the level of activation and proliferation of CD4+ T cells. We analysed the relationship between CD4+ T cell number and proliferation in HIV, pathogenic SIV in macaques, and non-pathogenic SIV in sooty mangabeys (SMs) and mandrills. We found that CD4+ T cell proliferation was negatively correlated with CD4+ T cell number, suggesting that animals respond to the loss of CD4+ T cells by increasing the proliferation of remaining cells. However, the level of proliferation seen in pathogenic infections (SIV in rhesus macaques and HIV) was much greater than in non-pathogenic infections (SMs and mandrills). We then used a modelling approach to understand how the host proliferative response to CD4+ T cell depletion may impact the outcome of infection. This modelling demonstrates that the rapid proliferation of CD4+ T cells in humans and macaques associated with low CD4+ T cell levels can act to ‘fuel the fire’ of infection by providing more proliferating cells for infection. Natural host species, on the other hand, have limited proliferation of CD4+ T cells at low CD4+ T cell levels, which allows them to restrict the number of proliferating cells susceptible to infection. |
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Keywords: | lymphocyte preservation lymphocyte proliferation/depletion CD4-positive T-lymphocytes Ki-67 antigen/analysis human/simian immunodeficiency virus mathematical model |
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