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1.
METHODS: To define potential common features of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections in different naturally infected host species, we compared the dynamics of viral replication in 31 African green monkeys (10 sabeus, 15 vervets and seven Caribbean AGMs), 14 mandrills and three sooty mangabeys (SMs) that were experimentally infected with their species-specific viruses. RESULTS: After infection, these SIVs replicated rapidly reaching viral loads (VLs) of 10(5)-10(9) copies/ml of plasma between days 9-14 post-infection (p.i). Set point viremia was established between days 42 and 60 p.i., with levels of approximately 10(5)-10(6) copies/ml in SM and mandrills, and lower levels (10(3)-10(5) copies/ml) in AGMs. VL during the chronic phase did not correlate with viral genome structure: SIVmnd-2 (a vpx-containing virus) and SIVmnd-1 (which does not contain vpu or vpx) replicated to similar levels in mandrills. VL was dependent on virus strain: vervets infected with three different viral strains showed different patterns of viral replication. The pattern of viral replication of SIVagm.sab, which uses both CCR5 and CXCR4 co-receptors was similar to those of the other viruses. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show a common pattern of SIV replication in naturally and experimentally infected hosts. This is similar overall to that observed in pathogenic SIV infection of macaques. This result indicates that differences in clinical outcome between pathogenic and non-pathogenic infections rely on host responses rather than the characteristics of the virus itself.  相似文献   

2.
In contrast to pathogenic human immunodeficiency virus and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections, chronic SIVagm infections in African green monkeys (AGMs) are characterized by persistently low peripheral and tissue viral loads that correlate with the lack of disease observed in these animals. We report here data on the dynamics of acute SIVagm infection in AGMs that exhibit remarkable similarities with viral replication patterns observed in peripheral blood during the first 2 weeks of pathogenic SIVmac infections. Plasma viremia was evident at day 3 postinfection (p.i.) in AGMs, and rapid viral replication led by days 7 to 10 to peak viremias characterized by high levels of antigenemia (1.2 to 5 ng of p27/ml of plasma), peripheral DNA viral load (10(4) to 10(5) DNA copies/10(6) peripheral blood mononuclear cells [PBMC]), and plasma RNA viral load (2 x 10(6) to 2 x 10(8) RNA copies/ml). The lymph node (LN) RNA and DNA viral load patterns were similar to those in blood, with peaks observed between day 7 and day 14. These values in LNs (ranging from 3 x 10(5) to 3 x 10(6) RNA copies/10(6) LN cell [LNC] and 10(3) to 10(4) DNA copies/10(6) LNC) were at no time point higher than those observed in the blood. Both in LNs and in blood, rapid and significant decreases were observed in all infected animals after this peak of viral replication. Within 3 to 4 weeks p. i., antigenemia was no longer detectable and peripheral viral loads decreased to values similar to those characteristic of the chronic phase of infection (10(2) to 10(3) DNA copies/10(6) PBMC and 2 x 10(3) to 2 x 10(5) RNA copies/ml of plasma). In LNs, viral loads declined to 5 x 10(1) to 10(3) DNA copies and 10(4) to 3 x 10(5) RNA copies per 10(6) LNC at day 28 p.i. and continued to decrease until day 84 p.i. (<10 to 3 x 10(4) RNA copies/10(6) LNC). Despite extensive viremia during primary infection, neither follicular hyperplasia nor CD8(+) cell infiltration into LN germinal centers was detected. Altogether, these results indicate that the nonpathogenic outcome of SIVagm infection in its natural host is associated with a rapidly induced control of viral replication in response to SIVagm infection, rather than with a poorly replicating virus or a constitutive host genetic resistance to virus replication.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanisms underlying the lack of disease progression in natural simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) hosts are still poorly understood. To test the hypothesis that SIV-infected African green monkeys (AGMs) avoid AIDS due to virus replication occurring in long-lived infected cells, we infected six animals with SIVagm and treated them with potent antiretroviral therapy [ART; 9-R-(2-phosphonomethoxypropyl) adenine (tenofovir) and beta-2,3-dideoxy-3-thia-5-fluorocytidine (emtricitabine)]. All AGMs showed a rapid decay of plasma viremia that became undetectable 36 h after ART initiation. A significant decrease of viral load was observed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and intestine. Mathematical modeling of viremia decay post-ART indicates a half-life of productively infected cells ranging from 4 to 9.5 h, i.e., faster than previously reported for human immunodeficiency virus and SIV. ART induced a slight but significant increase in peripheral CD4(+) T-cell counts but no significant changes in CD4(+) T-cell levels in lymph nodes and intestine. Similarly, ART did not significantly change the levels of cell proliferation, activation, and apoptosis, already low in AGMs chronically infected with SIVagm. Collectively, these results indicate that, in SIVagm-infected AGMs, the bulk of virus replication is sustained by short-lived cells; therefore, differences in disease outcome between SIVmac infection of macaques and SIVagm infection of AGMs are unlikely due to intrinsic differences in the in vivo cytopathicities between the two viruses.  相似文献   

4.
Mandrills are the only nonhuman primate (NHP) naturally infected by two types of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV): SIVmnd-1 and SIVmnd-2. We have already reported that the high SIVmnd-1 replication during primary infection contrasts with only transient changes in CD4+ and CD8+ cell counts. Since early virus-host interactions predict viral control and disease progression in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients, we investigated the dynamics of SIVmnd-2 primary infection in mandrills to examine the impact on immune effectors in blood and lymph nodes (LNs). To avoid in vitro strain selection, all mandrills in this study received plasma from SIVmnd-2-infected mandrills. SIVmnd-2 plasma viremia peaked at 10(7) to 10(8) RNA copies/ml between days 7 and 10. This peak was followed in all four monkeys by a decline in virus replication, with a set point level of 10(5) to 10(6) RNA copies/ml at day 42 postinfection (p.i.). Viral DNA load in PBMC and LNs also peaked between days 7 and 10 (10(5) to 10(6) DNA copies/10(6) cells) and stabilized at 10(3) to 10(4) DNA copies/10(6) cells during the chronic phase. Anti-SIVmnd-2 antibodies were detected starting from days 28 to 32. A transitory decline of CD3+ CD4+ cells in the LNs occurred in animals with high peak VLs. CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation in blood and LNs was noted between days 5 and 17 p.i., surrounding the peak of viral replication. This was most significant in the LNs. Activation markers then returned to preinfection values despite continuous and active viral replication during the chronic infection. The dynamics of SIVmnd-2 infection in mandrills showed a pattern similar to that of SIVmnd-1 infection. This might be a general feature of nonpathogenic SIV natural African NHP models.  相似文献   

5.
Pathogenesis studies of SIV infection have not been performed to date in wild monkeys due to difficulty in collecting and storing samples on site and the lack of analytical reagents covering the extensive SIV diversity. We performed a large scale study of molecular epidemiology and natural history of SIVagm infection in 225 free-ranging AGMs from multiple locations in South Africa. SIV prevalence (established by sequencing pol, env, and gag) varied dramatically between infant/juvenile (7%) and adult animals (68%) (p<0.0001), and between adult females (78%) and males (57%). Phylogenetic analyses revealed an extensive genetic diversity, including frequent recombination events. Some AGMs harbored epidemiologically linked viruses. Viruses infecting AGMs in the Free State, which are separated from those on the coastal side by the Drakensberg Mountains, formed a separate cluster in the phylogenetic trees; this observation supports a long standing presence of SIV in AGMs, at least from the time of their speciation to their Plio-Pleistocene migration. Specific primers/probes were synthesized based on the pol sequence data and viral loads (VLs) were quantified. VLs were of 104–106 RNA copies/ml, in the range of those observed in experimentally-infected monkeys, validating the experimental approaches in natural hosts. VLs were significantly higher (107–108 RNA copies/ml) in 10 AGMs diagnosed as acutely infected based on SIV seronegativity (Fiebig II), which suggests a very active transmission of SIVagm in the wild. Neither cytokine levels (as biomarkers of immune activation) nor sCD14 levels (a biomarker of microbial translocation) were different between SIV-infected and SIV-uninfected monkeys. This complex algorithm combining sequencing and phylogeny, VL quantification, serology, and testing of surrogate markers of microbial translocation and immune activation permits a systematic investigation of the epidemiology, viral diversity and natural history of SIV infection in wild African natural hosts.  相似文献   

6.
While the circumstances surrounding the origin and spread of HIV are becoming clearer, the particulars of the origin of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) are still unknown. Specifically, the age of SIV, whether it is an ancient or recent infection, has not been resolved. Although many instances of cross-species transmission of SIV have been documented, the similarity between the African green monkey (AGM) and SIVagm phylogenies has long been held as suggestive of ancient codivergence between SIVs and their primate hosts. Here, we present well-resolved phylogenies based on full-length AGM mitochondrial genomes and seven previously published SIVagm genomes; these allowed us to perform the first rigorous phylogenetic test to our knowledge of the hypothesis that SIVagm codiverged with the AGMs. Using the Shimodaira-Hasegawa test, we show that the AGM mitochondrial genomes and SIVagm did not evolve along the same topology. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the SIVagm topology can be explained by a pattern of west-to-east transmission of the virus across existing AGM geographic ranges. Using a relaxed molecular clock, we also provide a date for the most recent common ancestor of the AGMs at approximately 3 million years ago. This study substantially weakens the theory of ancient SIV infection followed by codivergence with its primate hosts.  相似文献   

7.
African green monkeys (AGMs) are naturally infected with a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVagm) that is nonpathogenic in its host. Although SIVagm is common and widespread, little is known about the mechanisms that govern its transmission. Since the earliest virus-host interactions may provide key insights into the nonpathogenic phenotype of SIVagm, we developed a mucosal transmission model for this virus. Using plasma from an acutely infected AGM as the virus inoculum, we exposed adult and juvenile AGMs, as well as pigtailed macaques (PTMs) as a nonnatural host control, by mucosal routes to increasing titers of virus and compared the doses needed to establish a productive infection. Four juvenile and four adult AGMs as well as two PTMs were intrarectally (IR) exposed, while two additional adult female AGMs were intravaginally (IVAG) exposed. No animal became infected following exposure to 10(5) RNA copies. Both PTMs but none of the AGMs became infected following exposure to 10(6) RNA copies. Finally, all adult AGMs and two of the four juvenile AGMs became infected following exposure to 10(7) RNA copies, acquiring either one (2 IR infected juveniles, 1 IR infected adult, 2 IVAG infected adults) or two (3 IR infected adults) transmitted founder viruses. These results were consistent with immunophenotypic data, which revealed a significant correlation between the percentage of CD4(+) T cells expressing CCR5 in the mucosa and the susceptibility to infection, in terms of both the viral dose and the numbers of transmitted founder viruses. Moreover, studies of uninfected AGMs showed that the fraction of CCR5-expressing CD4(+) T cells increased significantly with age. These results indicate that (i) AGMs are readily infected with SIVagm by both intrarectal and intravaginal routes, (ii) susceptibility to infection is proportional to the number of available CCR5(+) CD4(+) target cells in the mucosa, and (iii) the paucity of CCR5(+) CD4(+) target cells in infant and juvenile AGMs may explain the near absence of vertical transmission.  相似文献   

8.
African green monkeys (AGMs) persistently infected with SIVagm do not develop AIDS, although their plasma viremia levels can reach those reported for pathogenic HIV-1 and SIVmac infections. In contrast, the viral burden in lymph nodes in SIVagm-infected AGMs is generally lower in comparison with HIV/SIVmac pathogenic infections, at least during the chronic phase of SIVagm infection. We searched for the primary targets of viral replication, which might account for the high viremias in SIVagm-infected AGMs. We evaluated for the first time during primary infection SIVagm dissemination in various lymphoid and non-lymphoid tissues. Sixteen distinct organs at a time point corresponding to maximal virus production were analyzed for viral RNA and DNA load. At days 8 and 9 p.i., viral RNA could be detected in a wide range of tissues, such as jejunum, spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes, thymus and lung. Quantification of viral DNA and RNA as well as of productively infected cells revealed that viral replication during this early phase takes place mainly in secondary lymphoid organs and in the gut (5 x 10(4)-5 x 10(8) RNA copies/10(6) cells). By 4 years p.i., RNA copy numbers were below detection level in thymus and lung. Secondary lymphoid organs displayed 6 x 10(2)-2 x 10(6) RNA copies/10(6) cells, while some tissue fragments of ileum and jejunum still showed high viral loads (up to 10(9) copies/10(6) cells). Altogether, these results indicate a rapid dissemination of SIVagm into lymphoid tissues, including the small intestine. The latter, despite showing marked regional variations, most likely contributes significantly to the high levels of viremia observed during SIVagm infection.  相似文献   

9.
Although up to 50% of African green monkeys (AGMs) are infected by simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIV) in their natural habitat, they remain asymptomatic carriers of these lentiviruses. They provide an attractive model to study not only the origin but also the link among genetic variation, host-virus adaptation, and pathogenicity of primate lentiviruses. SIVagm have been isolated from three species of AGM: the vervet (Cercopithecus pygerythrus), the grivet (Cercopithecus aethiops), and the sabaeus (Cercopithecus sabaeus) monkey. We studied four new SIVagm isolates from a fourth AGM species, the tantalus monkey (Cercopithecus tantalus), caught in the Central African Republic, and four new isolates from feral sabaeus monkeys from Senegal. Antigenic properties and partial env sequences were used to evaluate the diversity among these isolates. Alignment of env sequences in SIVagm isolated from tantalus and sabaeus monkeys permitted detailed mapping of the variable and conserved domains in the external glycoprotein. Genetic distances indicated that SIVagm isolates from tantalus monkeys are the most divergent among SIVagm in feral AGMs in Africa. The fact that AGMs are infected by four distinct lentiviruses, each specific for a single AGM species, supports the hypothesis of a coevolution of these viruses and their natural hosts and suggests that SIV transmission is a rare event among separated AGM species in the wild.  相似文献   

10.
Chronic immune activation (IA) is considered as the driving force of CD4+ T cell depletion and AIDS. Fundamental clues in the mechanisms that regulate IA could lie in natural hosts of SIV, such as African green monkeys (AGMs). Here we investigated the role of innate immune cells and IFN-α in the control of IA in AGMs. AGMs displayed significant NK cell activation upon SIVagm infection, which was correlated with the levels of IFN-α. Moreover, we detected cytotoxic NK cells in lymph nodes during the early acute phase of SIVagm infection. Both plasmacytoid and myeloid dendritic cell (pDC and mDC) homing receptors were increased, but the maturation of mDCs, in particular of CD16+ mDCs, was more important than that of pDCs. Monitoring of 15 cytokines showed that those, which are known to be increased early in HIV-1/SIVmac pathogenic infections, such as IL-15, IFN-α, MCP-1 and CXCL10/IP-10, were significantly increased in AGMs as well. In contrast, cytokines generally induced in the later stage of acute pathogenic infection, such as IL-6, IL-18 and TNF-α, were less or not increased, suggesting an early control of IA. We then treated AGMs daily with high doses of IFN-α from day 9 to 24 post-infection. No impact was observed on the activation or maturation profiles of mDCs, pDCs and NK cells. There was also no major difference in T cell activation or interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) expression profiles and no sign of disease progression. Thus, even after administration of high levels of IFN-α during acute infection, AGMs were still able to control IA, showing that IA control is independent of IFN-α levels. This suggests that the sustained ISG expression and IA in HIV/SIVmac infections involves non-IFN-α products.  相似文献   

11.
African green monkeys (AGMs) infected by simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) SIVagm are resistant to AIDS. SIVagm-infected AGMs exhibit levels of viremia similar to those described during pathogenic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and SIVmac infections in humans and macaques, respectively, but contain lower viral loads in their lymph nodes. We addressed the potential role of dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN; CD209) in viral dissemination. In previous studies, it has been shown that human DC-SIGN and macaque DC-SIGN allow transmission of HIV and SIVmac to T cells. Here, we looked at the ability of DC-SIGN derived from AGM lymph nodes to interact with SIVagm. We show that DC-SIGN-expressing cells are present mainly in the medulla and often within the cortex and/or paracortex of AGM lymph nodes. We describe the isolation and characterization of at least three isoforms of dc-sign mRNA in lymph nodes of AGMs. The predicted amino acid sequence from the predominant mRNA isoform, DC-SIGNagm1, is 92 and 99% identical to the corresponding human and rhesus macaque DC-SIGN amino acid sequences, respectively. DC-SIGNagm1 is characterized by the lack of the fourth motif in the repeat domain. This deletion was also detected in the dc-sign gene derived from thirteen animals belonging to five other African monkey species and from four macaques (Macaca fascicularis and M. mulatta). Despite three- to seven-amino-acid modifications compared to DC-SIGNmac, DC-SIGNagm1 allows transmission of SIVagm to T cells. Furthermore, AGM monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MDDC) expressed at least 100,000 DC-SIGN molecules and were able to transmit SIVagm to T cells. At a low multiplicity of infection (10(-5) 50% tissue culture infective doses/cell), viral transmission by AGM MDDC was mainly DC-SIGN dependent. The present study reveals that DC-SIGN from a natural host species of SIV has the ability to act as an efficient attachment and transmission factor for SIVagm and suggests the absence of a direct link between this ability and viral load levels in lymph nodes.  相似文献   

12.
Nonpathogenic simian immunodeficiency virus SIVagm infection of African green monkeys (AGMs) is characterized by the absence of a robust antibody response against Gag p27. To determine if this is accompanied by a selective loss of T-cell responses to Gag p27, we studied CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses against Gag p27 and other SIVagm antigens in the peripheral blood and lymph nodes of acutely and chronically infected AGMs. Our data show that AGMs can mount a T-cell response against Gag p27, indicating that the absence of anti-p27 antibodies is not due to the absence of Gag p27-specific T cells.Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in African green monkeys (AGM) is nonpathogenic, even though it is characterized by plasma viral load (PVL) levels similar to those found during acute and chronic pathogenic infection of humans with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and macaques with SIVmac (14). This feature is shared with other African nonhuman primates, such as sooty mangabeys (SM) and mandrills (19, 20). SIV-infected AGMs also display high viral loads in the gastrointestinal mucosa (11), a transient decline of circulating CD4+ T cells during acute infection (13), and longer-lasting CD4+ T-cell depletion in the intestinal lamina propia (10). Concomitant with the peak viral load during acute infection, SIVagm-infected AGMs display transient increases of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells expressing activation, and proliferation markers, such as MHC-II DR and Ki-67 (4, 13), and anti-SIVagm antibodies (Ab) are induced with kinetics similar to those found in SIVmac infection (5). Interestingly, however, the Ab response against Gag p27 is weak, if present at all (1, 2, 12, 15, 17, 18). This observation is surprising since, in the context of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and SIVmac infections, Ab responses to Gag p27 are usually quite strong. Weak or low reactivity to Gag p27 has also been observed in some other natural SIV infections (7, 8, 20) but not in all of them (21). We wondered whether such a selective lack of Ab reactivity in the SIV-infected AGM might be related to a lack of Gag p27-specific T cells. With this hypothesis in mind, we first confirmed and extended the studies of humoral responses against Gag p27 by characterizing the antigen-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses and mid-point titers against total SIVagm antigens (SIVagm virions) and recombinant Gag p27 (rP27; SIVagm) in naturally and experimentally SIVagm-infected AGMs. Second, we searched for the presence of Gag p27-specific T-cell responses in SIVagm infection by analyzing the CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses specific for Gag p27 and other SIVagm proteins in blood and lymph nodes (LNs) of acutely and chronically infected animals.Humoral responses against SIV were analyzed in 50 wild-born AGMs (Chlorocebus sabaeus) and 17 rhesus macaques (RMs). The animals were housed at the Institut Pasteur in Dakar, Senegal, and the California National Primate Research Center, Davis, CA, respectively, according to institutional and national guidelines. RMs were either noninfected (n = 5) or intravenously infected with SIVmac251 (n = 12). AGMs were noninfected (n = 23), naturally infected (n = 17), or intravenously infected with wild-type SIVagm.sab92018 (n = 10) (5, 9). IgG titers against SIVagm.sab92018 virions or rP27 were determined by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using monkey anti-IgG as secondary Ab (Fig. 1A and B). The virions had been purified by ultracentrifugation on an iodixanol cushion from cell-free supernatants of SIVagm.sab92018-infected SupT1 cells. The His-tagged rP27 was constructed using DNA from gut cells of an SIVagm.sab92018-infected AGM 96011 (11). A Gag p27 PCR product was subcloned into pET-14b, and the recombinant protein was produced in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)(pLysS) and purified on nitrilotriacetic acid columns. SIV-infected macaques showed high IgG titers cross-reacting with both SIVagm virions (Fig. 1A and B, left panels) and rP27 (Fig. 1A and B, right panels). In contrast, only 2 out of 27 SIV-infected AGMs showed detectable IgG responses against rP27 (Fig. 1A and B, right panels), while 21 out of 27 displayed significant responses against SIVagm virions (Fig. 1A and B, left panels). Two AGMs out of 23 from the negative control group showed weak responses at the limit of detection against SIVagm and two against rP27, suggesting a natural response against SIVagm proteins, cross-reactivity with unknown pathogens, maternal Ab, or recent SIV infection. Of note, the titers against whole SIV in the infected monkeys were higher in macaques than in AGMs, which may be due to a lack of anti-p27 Ab in most AGMs.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Cross-sectional analysis of IgG Ab responses against SIVagm or Gag p27 in SIV-infected AGMs and RMs. (A and B) Cross-sectional analysis by ELISA. IgG Ab against SIVagm.sab92018 virions or recombinant p27-Gag antigens were determined in SIV-negative (Rh SIV−) and chronically SIVmac251-infected (Rh SIV+) RMs and in SIV-negative and chronically SIVagm-infected AGMs that were either naturally (AGM Nat SIV+) or experimentally (AGM Exp SIV+) infected with SIVagm.sab92018. Ab titers were calculated for each animal by limited dilution of plasma on coated ELISA plates with 5 μg/ml of (p27 equivalent) virions (left) or 1 μg/ml of the monomeric recombinant protein (rP27) (right). IgG detection by ELISA displayed a high background for rP27, especially at the highest plasma concentration (e.g., 1/100 and 1/400 plasma dilution) in SIV-negative RMs and AGMs. To discriminate between positive responses and background, calculated dose-response curves were compared to theoretical sigmoid-dose response curves corresponding to the 95% confidence interval of SIV-negative animals. By convention, responses were considered background when sigmoid dose-response curves were graphically within the 95% confidence interval of SIV-negative animals and when the calculated negative log 50% effective concentration (EC50) was lower than the top theoretical sigmoid dose-response curve from SIV-negative animals (corresponding to a threshold of negative log EC50 of 2.8). (A) Results (optical density at 450 nm [OD450]) are represented for both virions (left) and rP27 (right) over plasma dilution (log10) on a per animal basis (data points) and for each group (lines). Lines represent the sigmoid dose-response curves for each group (Prism 4; Graphpad). (B) Mid-point IgG titers were determined for each animal from individual sigmoid dose-response curves, and presented as the log10 value from the reciprocal of the effective concentration that corresponds to 50% response between minimum and maximum OD450 (negative log EC50). Horizontal bars represent the median mid-point titer per each group. Mann-Whitney nonparametric tests were applied for statistical analysis (n.s., nonsignificant, with P values of >0.1) (C) Cross-sectional analysis of Ab against SIVagm proteins by Western blot analysis using denatured SIVagm.sab92018. For the positive controls on the left, we used sera from an SIVmac251-infected macaque and a SIVagm.sab92018-infected AGM. Development times and reagents were identical for all Western blots. Mo, months of infection; y, years of infection; C−, negative control; C+, positive control.The study of IgGs by Western blot analysis using denatured SIVagm.sab92018 virions showed no or weak anti-Gag responses in SIV-infected AGMs, yet the anti-Env responses were often strong (Fig. (Fig.1C).1C). In contrast, SIV-infected macaques showed a dominant IgG cross-reactive response against the SIVagm Gag p27 protein. Even if responses in AGMs were detected more frequently with the Western blot analyses than with the ELISAs, these responses were different in magnitude and considerably weaker than those in macaques.To compare B- and T-cell responses over time, five simian T-cell leukemia virus-seronegative AGMs were infected with SIVagm.sab92018, and the animals were followed longitudinally during the acute and postacute phases of infection until day 90 postinfection (p.i.). Sequential blood samples were collected and biopsies of auxiliary and inguinal LNs were performed on day −5 and at three times p.i. (days 14, 43, and 62). PVL was measured by real-time PCR (5). Since we searched for Gag p27-specific responses, we also quantified Gag p27 antigen in the plasma (SIV p27 antigen assay; Coulter, Miami, FL). Viral RNA and p27 antigenemia peaks were observed between days 7 and 14 p.i. (Fig. 2A and B, respectively). The Gag p27 levels were variable among the animals but in a range similar to those reported previously in AGMs and macaques (3, 5). As has also been observed in SIVmac infection (except for rapid progressors), plasma Gag p27 levels fell below the detection level in the postacute phase (i.e., after day 28 p.i.) (Fig. (Fig.2B2B and data not shown). There were significant increases in circulating CD8+ DR+ T cells at days 7 and 14 p.i. and in CD8+ Ki-67+ T cells at days 14 and 28 p.i. (Fig. 2C and D, left panels). After day 28 p.i., the percentages were no longer statistically different from baseline levels. In LN cells (LNCs), the percentage of CD8+ Ki-67+ T cells rose from 3.1% ± 1.1% before infection to 6.1% ± 0.3% at day 62 p.i., but the difference was not statistically significant (Fig. (Fig.2D,2D, right panel). The levels of blood CD4+ DR+ Ki-67+, CD8+ DR+ Ki-67+, CD8+ Ki-67+ T cells, and LNC CD8+ Ki-67+ T cells were positively correlated with viremia (P values of 0.002 for DR+ cells and P values of <0.02 for Ki-67+ cells). Altogether, these results confirm previous data showing early, transient T-cell activation in the peripheral blood of SIVagm-infected AGMs (13).Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Plasma viremia and T-cell activation in blood and LNs of five longitudinally followed SIVagm.sab92018-infected African green monkeys. (A) SIVagm.sab RNA copy numbers in plasma. (B) Plasma Gag p27 concentrations. (C) Percentages of MHC-II DR-positive CD4+ (•) and CD8+ (○) T cells within, respectively, total CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from PBMCs and LNCs. (D) Percentages of Ki-67+ CD4+ (•) and CD8+ (○) T cells within, respectively, total CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from PBMCs and LNCs. Results are shown as the mean ± the standard error of the mean. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences compared to levels before infection (P < 0.05).We next looked for the presence of Ab responses against rP27 in these animals. No Ab were detected before infection. After infection, all five AGMs developed anti-SIVagm IgGs within 4 to 9 weeks p.i., with AGM 02001 showing the fastest response (Fig. (Fig.3A).3A). While the humoral responses against whole virions were significant (Fig. (Fig.3B),3B), the anti-rP27 responses were below the threshold for positivity (Fig. (Fig.3B),3B), with the exception of one animal (AGM 02001). The anti-rP27 response in this animal was only transient since it was no longer detectable at week 75 p.i., in contrast to the anti-SIV Ab that were sustained (Fig. (Fig.3B3B and data not shown).Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Longitudinal analysis of IgG titers and T-cell proliferative responses against SIVagm and Gag p27 in five AGMs experimentally infected with SIVagm.sab92018. (A and B) Ab responses were analyzed by ELISA. (A) IgG dose-response curves against SIVagm (top) and rP27 (bottom) are shown over time (week −1 to week 24 p.i.). O.D.450, optical density at 450 nm. (B) Mid-point titers were calculated as described in the legend to Fig. Fig.1A.1A. Continuous lines correspond to median titers from all five animals. Red, anti-SIVagm IgGs; green, anti-p27 IgGs. (C) Proliferative responses of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were assessed by flow cytometry using carboxy fluorescein succinimidyl ester staining (CFSE). CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses in PBMCs (left) and LNCs (right) after stimulation with peptide pools (Gag without P27, P27, and Tat) and Gag rP27 are shown for each animal. All data are reported after background subtraction. Results are presented in columns as the mean ± the standard error of the mean. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences compared to individual values before infection (P < 0.05).We next searched for T-cell responses against Gag p27 compared to other SIVagm antigens in these animals. Gag p27 epitopes were presented in the following two ways: in the context of rP27 and as synthetic peptides. The peptide pools (comprised of overlapping 15-mers) spanned the following SIVagm proteins: Gag p27, Gag without p27, Env, and Tat. The amino acid sequences of the Gag and Env peptides corresponded to the autologous wild-type SIVagm.sab92018 sequence, and those of the Tat peptides corresponded to an SIVagm.sab consensus sequence. The latter was determined using Tat sequences of other SIVagm viruses from Senegal that are available in the databases (SIVagm.sab1c, SIVagm.sabD42, and SIVagm.sabD30). We measured T-cell responses by investigating the antigen-induced proliferation. T cells from blood (peripheral blood mononuclear cells [PBMCs]) and LNs were analyzed. All assays were performed with fresh cells that were stimulated with 10 μg/ml of Gag rP27 and 5 μg/ml of peptides over a period of 4 days. Dead cells were gated out using 7-amino-actinomycin D, and dividing (CFSElow) cells were analyzed after stimulation with medium alone, SIV antigens, or concanavalin A as a positive control. We detected significant Gag p27-specific proliferative responses for CD8+ T cells in PBMCs and for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in LNCs (Fig. (Fig.3C).3C). The animal with the detectable anti-p27 Ab (AGM 02001) did not show stronger p27-specific T-cell responses than the other animals. Thus, all SIV-infected AGMs were able to mount a proliferative T-cell response against p27, while anti-p27 IgGs were lacking in four of the animals. However, the SIVagm-specific T-cell responses were detected at only a few time points p.i.We then analyzed the T-cell responses in the chronic phase of AGMs naturally and experimentally infected with SIVagm.sab92018. PVL, peripheral blood cell counts (CD4+ and CD8+ T cells; CD20+ B cells), and immune activation (Ki-67+ CD4+ and CD8+ T cells) were similar in naturally infected and in experimentally infected AGMs (Fig. (Fig.4A).4A). As expected, cell counts and immune activation levels were also not different from SIV-negative AGMs (Fig. (Fig.4A).4A). Again, we measured SIV-specific responses first by a proliferation assay (Fig. (Fig.4B).4B). One out of five animals tested had a proliferative SIV-specific CD4+ T-cell response (against Gag without p27, P27, rP27, Env GP120, and Tat), and two animals had a CD8+ T-cell response (against P27 in both animals and against Env GP120 and Tat in one). Two animals (one naturally infected and one experimentally infected with SIVagm.sab92018) did not show any detectable antigen-specific proliferative CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell response.Open in a separate windowFIG. 4.Immune parameters and SIVagm-specific proliferative and cytokine T-cell responses in chronically infected AGMs. (A) Cell counts (CD4+ and CD8+ T cells; B cells) and immune activation levels (percent of Ki-67+ in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells) in AGMs (n = 4) naturally infected with SIVagm (Nat SIV+) and AGMs (n = 6) experimentally infected with SIVagm.sab92018 (Exp SIV+) compared to uninfected AGMs (n = 10) (SIV). PVL, if known, is indicated. Green, blue, and orange symbols correspond, respectively, to noninfected, naturally infected, and experimentally infected AGMs. (B) Proliferative response to SIVagm antigens in chronically infected AGMs (n = 5) compared to those in uninfected AGMs (n = 3). PBMCs were stimulated with the same antigens as those described in the legend to Fig. Fig.3.3. (C) Analysis of cytokine responses (gamma interferon [IFN-γ] and tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α]) by SIVagm-specific T cells. ConA was used as a positive control. Representative results from a single animal are shown here. (D) Cumulative values of SIVagm-specific TNF-α and IFN-γ responses in chronically infected animals. The responses to SIVagm antigens were analyzed in peripheral blood specimens of 4 naturally and 5 experimentally infected AGMs as well as 10 uninfected AGMs. The data are reported after background subtraction corresponding to the subtraction of the frequency of positive events from the unstimulated samples to the frequency of positive events from the antigen-specific stimulation. Proliferative T-cell responses and cytokine T-cell responses in SIV-infected AGMs were defined as positive when higher than 3 standard deviations above the mean responses for uninfected animals. Freq, frequency; w/o, without.These results were extended to an analysis of SIV-specific T-cell cytokine responses, e.g., the production of IFN-γ and TNF-α in nine chronically infected compared to 10 noninfected AGMs (Fig. 4C and D). Fresh cells were stimulated for 8 h with the antigens described above. SIV-specific cytokine responses were detected in CD8+ but not in CD4+ T cells. Seven animals out of nine showed a response against at least one antigen. The two animals showing no response were among the four naturally infected animals tested. We therefore cannot exclude that the absence of response in these two animals is due to the presence of highly divergent viruses. However, a precise epitope mapping in SIVagm sequences would be necessary to confirm this. In those animals showing a SIVagm-specific cytokine T-cell response, the responses were directed against Gag p27 (four out of nine animals), other Gag proteins than p27 (two out of nine animals), and Env GP120 (four out of nine animals). In the experimentally infected animals, we might have underestimated the responses against Tat compared to Gag and Env antigens, since the Tat peptides corresponded to an SIVagm.sab consensus sequence and not to the autologous virus (SIVagm.sab92018). There was no correlation between the magnitude or breadth of SIV-specific T-cell responses and immune activation or PVL.Altogether, our study demonstrates that AGMs can mount T-cell proliferative and cytokine responses against Gag p27. The T-cell response was variable among the animals. In general, it appeared moderate, comparable to chronically SIV-infected RMs (9). Of note, T-cell responses were not consistently detected at all time points and not in all animals. We cannot exclude the possibility that we underestimated the magnitude of the cytokine responses. For instance, we did not costimulate the cells during the assays. However, cytokine responses were also variable in vervet AGMs, with a trend for reduced levels compared to those for RMs, even when more-sensitive assays were used (23). In SM, the responses were also reported to be not stronger than in RMs. This is in line with the lack of efficient control of viral replication in natural hosts (6, 22).In our study, we show that IgG responses against Gag p27 are either lacking, weak, or transient, while Ab against other SIVagm proteins are present. The mechanisms underlying this selective lack of Gag p27 Ab responses are unclear. It could be related to moderate and/or dysfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses and/or due to an unknown suppressive regulatory mechanism. SIV-specific T-cell cytokine responses were indeed principally found at the CD8+ T-cell level. This was also reported in SIVsm-infected SM (6, 22). Here, we also searched for SIVagm Gag p27-specific proliferative responses. Interestingly, they were detected for CD4+ T cells, indicating the presence of p27-specific CD4+ memory cells in AGMs. Moreover, AGMs can potentially mount a strong and sustained anti-Gag p27 humoral response, when appropriately immunized (D. Favre et al., unpublished data). This suggests that there is neither a central B-cell tolerance against p27 Gag protein in AGMs nor an inherent inability for CD4+ T cells to provide helper B-cell functions. The transient nature of anti-p27 Ab in one animal would be in favor of regulatory mechanisms, but that needs to be confirmed. Another explanation could be that AGMs are able to mount Ab responses against some p27 epitopes but not to those exposed by the native protein, which would explain why we and others detect more frequently humoral responses in Western blot analysis than in ELISAs (16).In conclusion, we characterized the IgG responses against SIVagm and confirmed a lower humoral response against p27 than in RMs. Moreover, our study reveals that cytokine and proliferative T-cell responses against SIVagm Gag p27 are detectable in AGMs. Thus, the reduced ability of the AGM to produce Ab against Gag p27 p.i. is not related to a lack of Gag p27-specific T cells.  相似文献   

13.
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection of natural hosts is characterized by nonpathogenic chronic viremia, maintenance of gastrointestinal epithelial barrier integrity, and low numbers of target cells. Assessment of cell-associated virus load in T cell subsets in multiple anatomic compartments of chronically SIV-infected sabeus African green monkeys (AGMs) revealed that gastrointestinal memory CD4+ T lymphocytes are a major source of cell-associated virus and a significant contributor to SIV viremia in AGMs.  相似文献   

14.
We addressed the role of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC) in protection against AIDS in nonpathogenic simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVagm) infection in African green monkeys (AGMs). PDC were monitored in blood and lymph nodes (LNs) starting from day 1 postinfection. We observed significant declines in blood during acute infection. However, PDC then returned to normal levels, and chronically infected AGMs showed no decrease of PDC in blood. There was a significant increase of PDC in LNs during acute infection. Blood PDC displayed only weak alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) responses to TLR9 agonist stimulation before infection. However, during acute infection, both blood and LN PDC showed a transiently increased propensity for IFN-alpha production. Bioactive IFN-alpha was detected in plasma concomitant with the peak of viremia, though levels were only low to moderate in some animals. Plasma interleukin 6 (IL-6) and IL-12 were not increased. In conclusion, PDC were recruited to the LNs and displayed increased IFN-alpha production during acute infection. However, increases in IFN-alpha were transient. Together with the lack of inflammatory cytokine responses, these events might play an important role in the low level of T-cell activation which is associated with protection against AIDS in nonpathogenic SIVagm infection.  相似文献   

15.
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected African nonhuman primates do not progress to AIDS in spite of high and persistent viral loads (VLs). Some authors consider the high viral replication observed in chronic natural SIV infections to be due to lower anti-SIV antibody titers than those in rhesus macaques, suggesting a role of antibodies in controlling viral replication. We therefore investigated the impact of antibody responses on the outcome of acute and chronic SIVagm replication in African green monkeys (AGMs). Nine AGMs were infected with SIVagm.sab. Four AGMs were infused with 50 mg/kg of body weight anti-CD20 (rituximab; a gift from Genentech) every 21 days, starting from day −7 postinfection up to 184 days. The remaining AGMs were used as controls and received SIVagm only. Rituximab-treated AGMs were successfully depleted of CD20 cells in peripheral blood, lymph nodes (LNs), and intestine, as shown by the dynamics of CD20+ and CD79a+ cells. There was no significant difference in VLs between CD20-depleted AGMs and control monkeys: peak VLs ranged from 107 to 108 copies/ml; set-point values were 104 to 105 SIV RNA copies/ml. Levels of acute mucosal CD4+ T-cell depletion were similar for treated and nontreated animals. SIVagm seroconversion was delayed for the CD20-depleted AGMs compared to results for the controls. There was a significant difference in both the timing and magnitude of neutralizing antibody responses for CD20-depleted AGMs compared to results for controls. CD20 depletion significantly altered the histological structure of the germinal centers in the LNs and Peyer''s patches. Our results, although obtained with a limited number of animals, suggest that humoral immune responses play only a minor role in the control of SIV viral replication during acute and chronic SIV infection in natural hosts.In marked contrast to pathogenic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections of humans and macaques, which are characterized by the constant progression to AIDS in a variable time frame (26), African monkey species naturally infected with SIV are generally spared from any signs of disease (reviewed in references 53 and 71).There are currently three animal models of SIV infection in natural hosts: SIVagm infection of African green monkeys (AGMs), SIVsmm infection of sooty mangabeys, and SIVmnd-1 and SIVmnd-2 infection of mandrills (53, 71). SIV infection in natural hosts is characterized by the following: (i) active viral replication, with set-point viral loads (VLs) similar to or even higher than those found in pathogenic infections (44-46, 49, 50, 52, 61-63); (ii) transient depletion of peripheral CD4+ T cells during primary infection, which rebound to preinfection levels during chronic infection (12, 30, 44-46, 49, 62); (iii) significant CD4+ T-cell depletion in the intestine, which can be partially restored during chronic infection in spite of significant viral replication (21, 48); (iv) low levels of CD4+ CCR5+ cells in blood and tissues (47); (v) transient and moderate increases in immune activation and T-cell proliferation during acute infection, with a return to baseline levels during the chronic phase (44-46, 49, 50, 52, 61-63), as a result of an anti-inflammatory milieu which is rapidly established after infection (14, 30); and (vi) no significant increase in CD4+ T-cell apoptosis during either acute or chronic infection (37, 48), thus avoiding enteropathy and microbial translocation, which control excessive immune activation and prevent disease progression by allowing CD4+ T-cell recovery in the presence of high VLs (21, 48). Hence, the current view is that the main reason behind the lack of disease progression in natural African hosts lies in a better adaptation of the host in response to the highly replicating virus. A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the lack of disease in natural hosts for SIV infection may provide important clues for understanding the pathogenesis of HIV infection (53, 71).To date, it is still unknown whether or not immune responses are responsible for the lack of disease progression in natural hosts, since data are scarce. Studies of cellular immune responses are significantly more limited than is the case with pathogenic infection, and although not always in agreement (3, 13, 28, 29, 73, 76), their convergence point is that cellular immune responses are not essentially superior to those observed in pathogenic infections (3, 13, 28, 29, 73, 76). This observation is not surprising in the context of the high viral replication in natural hosts. Data are even scarcer on the role of humoral immune responses in the control of disease progression in natural hosts. However, several studies reported that anti-SIV antibody titers are lower in SIV infections of natural hosts, with a lack of anti-Gag responses being characteristic of natural SIV infections in African nonhuman primates (1, 6, 24, 25, 42, 43, 71). Because the viral replication in SIVagm-infected AGMs is of the same magnitude or higher than that in pathogenic infections of rhesus macaques (RMs), it has been hypothesized that these high VLs may be a consequence of the lower antibody titers. Moreover, a recent study has also shown that B cells in lymph nodes (LNs) of AGMs are activated at an earlier time point than is the case for SIVmac251-infected RMs, which implies that humoral immune responses may be important in controlling SIV replication in the natural hosts (9). Conversely, it has been shown that passively transferring immunoglobulins from animals naturally infected with SIVagm prior to infection with a low dose of SIVagm did not prevent infection in AGMs (42, 60), which is in striking contrast to results in studies of pathogenic infections, which convincingly demonstrated with animal models that intravenously administered or topically applied antibodies can protect macaques against intravenous or mucosal simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenge (34-36, 54, 72).Previous CD20+ B-cell-depletion studies during pathogenic RM infections have indicated that humoral immune responses may be important for controlling both the postpeak VL and disease progression (38, 57). However, these studies used strains that are highly resistant to neutralization (SIVmac251 and SIVmac239), making it difficult to assess the role that antibodies have in controlling SIV replication and disease progression. Moreover, our recent results suggested a limited impact of humoral immune responses in controlling replication of a neutralization-sensitive SIVsmm strain in rhesus macaques (18).To investigate the effect that CD20+ B cells and antibodies have on SIV replication in natural hosts, we have depleted CD20+ B cells in vivo in AGMs infected with SIVagm.sab92018. We assessed the impact of humoral immune responses on the control of viral replication and other immunological parameters, and we report that ablating humoral immune responses in SIVagm-infected AGMs does not significantly alter the course of virus replication or disease progression.  相似文献   

16.
The design of immunologic interventions to prevent postnatal transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) will require identification of protective immune responses in this setting. Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected rhesus monkeys (RMs), a species that develops an AIDS-like illness following experimental infection, transmit the virus at a high rate during breastfeeding. In contrast, postnatal transmission of SIV occurs rarely or not at all in natural, asymptomatic primate hosts of SIV. These contrasting transmission patterns provide a unique opportunity to study mechanisms that evolved to protect suckling infants from SIV infection. We compared the virologic and immunologic properties of milk of SIV-infected and uninfected natural hosts of SIV, African green monkeys (AGMs), to that of RMs. Interestingly, despite a low number of milk CD4(+) T lymphocytes in uninfected AGMs, milk virus RNA load in SIV-infected AGMs was comparable to that of SIV-infected RMs and that in AGM plasma. This observation is in contrast to the relatively low virus load in milk compared to that in plasma of SIV-infected RMs and HIV-infected women. Milk of SIV-infected AGMs also displayed robust virus-specific cellular immune responses. Importantly, an autologous challenge virus-specific neutralization response was detected in milk of five of six SIV-infected AGMs that was comparable in magnitude to that in plasma. In contrast, autologous challenge virus neutralization was not detectable in milk of SIV-infected RMs. The autologous virus-specific adaptive immune responses in breast milk of AGMs may contribute to impedance of virus transmission in the infant oral/gastrointestinal tract and the rarity of postnatal virus transmission in natural hosts of SIV.  相似文献   

17.
To better understand which factors govern the levels of viral loads in early lentiviral infections of primates, we developed a model that allows distinguishing between the influences of host and viral factors on viremia. Herein we report that two species of African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus and C. pygerythrus) infected with their respective wild-type simian immunodeficiency virus SIVagm viruses (SIVagm.sab92018 and SIVagm.ver644) consistently showed reproducible differences in viremia during primary infection but not at later stages of infection. Cross-infections of SIVagm.sab92018 and SIVagm.ver644 into, respectively, C. pygerythrus and C. sabaeus revealed that the dynamics of viral replication during primary infection were dependent on the viral strain used for the infection but not on the host. Hence, the kinetics of SIVagm.sab92018 and SIVagm.ver644 were similar in both sabaeus and vervet animals, indicating that the difference in viremia levels between the two groups during the early phase of infection was not associated with the host. Coreceptor usage for these two strains showed a larger coreceptor repertoire for SIVagm.sab92018, which is able to efficiently use CXCR4 in addition to CCR5, than for SIVagm.ver644, which showed a classical CCR5 coreceptor usage pattern. These differences could not be explained by different charges of the V3 loop for SIVagm.sab92018 and for SIVagm.ver644. In conclusion, our study showed that the extent of virus replication during the primary infection is primarily dependent on viral determinants.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined the viral load in the peripheral blood of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected African green monkeys with a view to the unexplained apathogenicity of African green monkey SIV (SIVagm) in its natural host. By using polymerase chain reaction, viral DNA was detected in fresh peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of each of nine seropositive animals. The virus DNA load was variable among the monkeys tested, ranging from 5 to 50 (mean = 15) copies per 10(5) PBMC, which is comparable to that of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in humans. The level of infectious SIVagm in PBMC was measured by endpoint dilution cultures. SIVagm was recovered from PBMC from 14 of 17 antibody-positive monkeys (82%), and the mean SIVagm titer in PBMC of seropositive African green monkeys was 10 tissue culture infectious doses per 10(6) cells, similar to the titer shown for HIV in asymptomatic carriers. Free infectious virus was isolated from the plasma of 4 of 17 monkeys (24%), and SIVagm expression in peripheral blood in vivo, as demonstrated by in situ hybridization, was detectable only in those animals which were viremic. SIVagm replication is therefore not totally suppressed in vivo, and SIVagm has a viral load equivalent to that seen for HIV-1 in asymptomatic humans.  相似文献   

19.
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in African nonhuman primate (NHP) natural hosts is usually nonpathogenic, despite high levels of virus replication. We have previously shown that chronic SIV infection in sooty mangabeys (SMs) and African green monkeys (AGMs) is associated with low levels of immune activation and bystander T cell apoptosis. To compare these features with those observed in another natural host, the mandrill (MND), we conducted a cross-sectional survey of the 23 SIV-infected and 25 uninfected MNDs from the only semifree colony of mandrills available worldwide. Viral loads (VLs) were determined and phenotypic and functional analysis of peripheral blood- and lymph node-derived lymphocytes was performed. We found that mandrills chronically infected with SIVmnd-1 or SIVmnd-2 have similar levels of viral replication, and we observed a trend toward lower CD4+ T cell counts in chronically SIVmnd-2-infected MNDs than SIVmnd-1-infected MNDs. No correlation between CD4+ T cell counts and VLs in SIV-infected MNDs could be established. Of note, the levels of T cell activation, proliferation, and apoptosis were comparable between SIVmnd-1- and SIVmnd-2-infected MNDs and to those observed in uninfected animals, with the only exception being an increase in tumor necrosis factor alpha-producing CD8+ T cells in SIVmnd-2-infected MNDs. Overall, these findings recapitulate previous observations in SIV-infected SMs and AGMs and lend further evidence to the hypothesis that low levels of immune activation protect natural SIV hosts from disease progression.  相似文献   

20.
The predictive value of acute gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) CD4+ T cell depletion in lentiviral infections was assessed by comparing three animal models illustrative of the outcomes of SIV infection: pathogenic infection (SIVsmm infection of rhesus macaques (Rh)), persistent nonprogressive infection (SIVagm infection of African green monkeys (AGM)), and transient, controlled infection (SIVagm infection of Rh). Massive acute depletion of GALT CD4+ T cells was a common feature of acute SIV infection in all three models. The outcome of this mucosal CD4+ T cell depletion, however, differed substantially between the three models: in SIVsmm-infected Rh, the acute GALT CD4+ T cell depletion was persistent and continued with disease progression; in SIVagm, intestinal CD4+ T cells were partially restored during chronic infection in the context of normal levels of apoptosis and immune activation and absence of damage to the mucosal immunologic barrier; in SIVagm-infected Rh, complete control of viral replication resulted in restoration of the mucosal barrier and immune restoration. Therefore, our data support a revised paradigm wherein severe GALT CD4+ T cell depletion during acute pathogenic HIV and SIV infections of humans and Rh is necessary but neither sufficient nor predictive of disease progression, with levels of immune activation, proliferation and apoptosis being key factors involved in determining progression to AIDS.  相似文献   

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