نتایج جستجو برای: hiv infection of cd4 t cells

تعداد نتایج: 21478443  

Journal: :Journal of virology 2014
Miriam Schieffer Heiko K Jessen Alexander F Oster Franco Pissani Damien Z Soghoian Richard Lu Arne B Jessen Carmen Zedlack Bruce T Schultz Isaiah Davis Srinika Ranasinghe Eric S Rosenberg Galit Alter Ralf R Schumann Hendrik Streeck

UNLABELLED Effector CD4 T cell responses have been shown to be critically involved in the containment and clearance of viral pathogens. However, their involvement in the pathogenesis of HIV infection is less clear, given their additional role as preferred viral targets. We previously demonstrated that the presence of HIV-specific CD4 T cell responses is somewhat associated with HIV control and ...

2013
Emily L. Ho Rollie Ronquillo Hermann Altmeppen Serena S. Spudich Richard W. Price Elizabeth Sinclair

In order to characterize the cellular composition of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in a healthy state and in the setting of chronic pleocytosis associated with HIV-1 (HIV) infection, multi-parameter flow cytometry was used to identify and quantitate cellular phenotypes in CSF derived from HIV-uninfected healthy controls and HIV-infected subjects across a spectrum of disease and treatment. CD4+ T ce...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2002
Jacob D Estes Brandon F Keele Klara Tenner-Racz Paul Racz Michael A Redd Tyler C Thacker Yongjun Jiang Michael J Lloyd Suzanne Gartner Gregory F Burton

Follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) represent a major reservoir of HIV, and active infection occurs surrounding these cells, suggesting that this microenvironment is highly conducive to virus transmission. Because CD4 T cells around FDCs in germinal centers express the HIV coreceptor, CXCR4, whereas CD4 lymphocytes in many other sites do not, it prompted the hypothesis that FDCs may increase CXCR...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2016
Benjamin Trinité Chi N Chan Caroline S Lee David N Levy

UNLABELLED HIV-1 infection leads to the progressive depletion of the CD4 T cell compartment by various known and unknown mechanisms. In vivo, HIV-1 infects both activated and resting CD4 T cells, but in vitro, in the absence of any stimuli, resting CD4 T cells from peripheral blood are resistant to infection. This resistance is generally attributed to an intracellular environment that does not ...

2015
Robert M. Paris Constantinos Petrovas Sara Ferrando-Martinez Eirini Moysi Kristin L. Boswell Eva Archer Takuya Yamamoto David Ambrozak Joseph P. Casazza Richard Haubrich Mark Connors Julie Ake Jerome H. Kim Richard A. Koup Derya Unutmaz

The role of PD-1 expression on CD4 T cells during HIV infection is not well understood. Here, we describe the differential expression of PD-1 in CD127high CD4 T cells within the early/intermediate differentiated (EI) (CD27highCD45RAlow) T cell population among uninfected and HIV-infected subjects, with higher expression associated with decreased viral replication (HIV-1 viral load). A significa...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2010
Jian Ding Aprille Rapista Natalia Teleshova Goar Mosoyan Gary A Jarvis Mary E Klotman Theresa L Chang

Sexually transmitted infections increase the likelihood of HIV-1 transmission. We investigated the effect of Neisseria gonorrheae (gonococcus [GC]) exposure on HIV replication in primary resting CD4(+) T cells, a major HIV target cell during the early stage of sexual transmission of HIV. GC and TLR2 agonists, such as peptidylglycan (PGN), Pam(3)CSK(4), and Pam(3)C-Lip, a GC-derived synthetic li...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2008
Yan Zhou Lin Shen Hung-Chih Yang Robert F Siliciano

CD4+ T-cell depletion is the hallmark of AIDS pathogenesis. Multiple mechanisms may contribute to the death of productively infected CD4+ T cells and innocent-bystander cells. In this study, we characterize a novel mechanism in which human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection preferentially depletes peripheral memory CD4+ T cells before the completion of reverse transcription. Using ...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 1999
A M de Roda Husman H Blaak M Brouwer H Schuitemaker

CCR5 cell-surface expression was studied in relation to CCR5 genotype and clinical course of HIV-1 infection. HIV-1 infected CCR5+/+ individuals had higher percentages of CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells as compared with HIV-1-infected CCR532/+ individuals. For both genotypic groups, the percentages of CCR5-expressing cells were higher than for the uninfected counterparts (CCR5+/+, HIV+ 28% and HIV...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2007
Kyra Oswald-Richter Stacy M Grill Mindy Leelawong Michelle Tseng Spyros A Kalams Todd Hulgan David W Haas Derya Unutmaz

Infection with HIV-1 perturbs homeostasis of human T cell subsets, leading to accelerated immunologic deterioration. While studying changes in CD4(+) memory and naïve T cells during HIV-1 infection, we found that a subset of CD4(+) effector memory T cells that are CCR7(-)CD45RO(-)CD45RA(+) (referred to as TEMRA cells), was significantly increased in some HIV-infected individuals. This T cell su...

2016
Fengliang Liu Xiuzhen Fan Sarah Auclair Monique Ferguson Jiaren Sun Lynn Soong Wei Hou Robert R. Redfield Deborah L. Birx Silvia Ratto-Kim Merlin L. Robb Jerome H. Kim Nelson L. Michael Haitao Hu

Loss of immune control over opportunistic infections can occur at different stages of HIV-1 (HIV) disease, among which mucosal candidiasis caused by the fungal pathogen Candida albicans (C. albicans) is one of the early and common manifestations in HIV-infected human subjects. The underlying immunological basis is not well defined. We have previously shown that compared to cytomegalovirus (CMV)...

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