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HIV-1 infection impairs cell cycle progression of CD4+ T cells without affecting early activation responses
Scott F. Sieg, … , Clifford V. Harding, Michael M. Lederman
Scott F. Sieg, … , Clifford V. Harding, Michael M. Lederman
Published September 1, 2001
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2001;108(5):757-764. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI12685.
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Article

HIV-1 infection impairs cell cycle progression of CD4+ T cells without affecting early activation responses

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Abstract

Failure of CD4+ T cells to proliferate in response to antigenic stimulation is a characteristic of HIV infection. Analysis of the proliferation defect has been hampered by an inability to identify CD4+ cells with T cell receptor specificity for antigen. To focus only on cells that had been stimulated through the T cell receptor, CD4+ T cells were stimulated with an anti-Vβ3 Ab that activates approximately 3–5% of peripheral blood T cells. This approach revealed proliferation defects in cells from HIV-infected patients that were not appreciated using anti-CD3 Ab stimulation and provided the capacity to examine responses on a single cell basis. After anti-Vβ3 Ab stimulation, CD4+Vβ3+ cells from HIV-infected patients demonstrated defects in expression of cell cycle–associated proteins, D-type cyclins, and cyclin A. However, the expression of early activation markers, CD69 and CD25, was not significantly impaired in cells from most patients. Thus, CD4+ T cell proliferation failure in HIV disease is characterized by dysregulated activation that precludes cell cycle progression. This proliferation defect was most apparent in patients with diminished CD4+ T cell numbers and higher plasma HIV RNA levels. CD4+ T cell proliferation failure may be a key determinant of immune impairment in HIV disease.

Authors

Scott F. Sieg, Clifford V. Harding, Michael M. Lederman

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Proliferation responses and expression of CD69 and CD25 in anti-Vβ3–stim...

Proliferation responses and expression of CD69 and CD25 in anti-Vβ3–stimulated cells


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