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Pathogenesis of HIV disease and markers of progression

Pathogenesis of HIV disease and markers of progression. Anjie Zhen, PhD. Summary. Overview of HIV life cycle Overview human immune responses HIV pathogenesis Acquisition of HIV Acute infection Chronic infection and markers of progression AIDS. Overview of HIV life cycle.

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Pathogenesis of HIV disease and markers of progression

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  1. Pathogenesis of HIV disease and markers of progression Anjie Zhen, PhD

  2. Summary • Overview of HIV life cycle • Overview human immune responses • HIV pathogenesis • Acquisition of HIV • Acute infection • Chronic infection and markers of progression • AIDS

  3. Overview of HIV life cycle • HIV life cycle: • Binding and Fusion • Entry • Reverse transcription • Integration • Viral RNA and protein expression • Assembly and budding • Maturation • HIV target cells: • CD4T cells, • Macrohpages, • Dendritic cells

  4. Overview of adaptive immunity Nonspecific Specific

  5. Clearance of viral infection

  6. 4 – 8 weeks HIV disease progression – clinical latency AIDS and Death Acute Asymptomatic (clinical latency) Primary infection HIV viral load CD8+ T cell Neutralizing Antibodies Levels (Separate Scales) CD4+ T cell Years

  7. HIV disease progression –Acute infection

  8. HIV disease progression -- Clinical Latency • During this period of the disease, the immune systems remains competent at handling most infections with opportunistic microbes • Few or no clinical manifestation. • Steady destruction of CD4+ T cells and steady decline of circulating blood CD4+ T cells

  9. Mechanism of CD4 T cell depletion in HIV infection

  10. Mechanism of CD4 T cell depletion in HIV infection • Infection and killing of infected cells only explain part of the T cells loss • Chronic immune activation and disrupted T cell homeostasis

  11. HIV Specific T Cell Responses HIV Infected Cells Killing of HIV Infected Cells HIV-Specific T Cell Mature T-Cells Incomplete Clearance of HIV Infected Cells and Exhaustion Stem Cell Expansion of HIV-Specific Cells RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT Thymus Periphery

  12. HIV disease progression -- AIDS • Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome: • Catastrophic breakdown of host defenses, marked increase in viremia and clinical disease. • CD4+ cell count less than or equal to 200 per microliter • Clinical Features: • Opportunistic infection • Neoplasms • CNS involvement

  13. 4 – 8 weeks HIV disease progression – clinical latency AIDS and Death Acute Asymptomatic (clinical latency) Primary infection HIV viral load CD8+ T cell Neutralizing Antibodies Levels (Separate Scales) CD4+ T cell Years

  14. Markers of HIV disease progression • CD4 T cell counts • Viral load • Markers of immune activation

  15. Markers of disease progression: CD4 cell count • Major Factor to initiate therapy • CD4<350: strongly recommended (Data from randomized trials) • <350<CD4<500: strongly recommended (Data from well designed non-redomized trials or observational cohort studies) • Cd4>500: moderately recommended • Prophylaxis against opportunistic infection is based on CD4 counts The Lancet Volume 360, Issue 9327 2002 119 - 129

  16. Markers of disease progression: Viral load • The HIV-1 viral load measurement indicates the number of copies of HIV-1 RNA per milliliter of plasma. • Viral load is an accurate reflection of the burden of infection and the magnitude of viral replication. • It is critical in monitoring virologic response to ART. The Lancet Volume 360, Issue 9327 2002 119 - 129

  17. Prognosis according to CD4 cell count and viral load in the pre-HAART and HAART eras The Lancet Volume 360, Issue 9327 2002 119 - 129

  18. Markers of disease progression: Viral load set point

  19. Markers of disease progression: Immune activation markers • Chronic immune activation is a characteristic of HIV disease progression. • Activation markers expressed on cell surface: CD69, CD25, and MHC class II, CD38, etc.

  20. Questions • List key stages for HIV disease progression? • While CD4 T cells are progressively depleted during untreated HIV infection, what happens to CD8 T cells? • List one important laboratory marker of HIV disease progression other than CD4 cell count

  21. Questions • List key stages for HIV disease progression? • Acute infection, clinical latency, AIDS. • While CD4 T cells are progressively depleted during untreated HIV infection, what happens to CD8 T cells? • In early HIV infection, CD8 T cells tend to increase in number, in response to viral infection. However, at advanced stages of HIV disease, CD8 cells also decline precipitously. • List one important laboratory marker of HIV disease progression other than CD4 cell count • Viral load.

  22. Discussion • How will effective anti-retroviral therapy affect our immune responses?

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