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C Paganin, D S Monos, J D Marshall, I Frank, G Trinchieri
J Clin Invest. 1997;
99(4):663
doi:10.1172/JCI119209
Abstract |
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t has been postulated that HIV-infected patients undergo an active production of virus and CD4+ T cell destruction from the early stages of the disease, and that an extensive postthymic expansion of CD4+ T cells prevents a precipitous decline in CD4+ T cell number. Based on the rebound of the CD4+ T cell number observed in patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy with protease inhibitors, it has been calculated that, on average, 5% of T cells are replaced every day in HIV-infected patients. To obtain an independent estimate of the recycling rate of T cells in the patients, we measured the frequency of cells carrying a loss-of-function mutation at the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (hprt) locus. Assuming a recycling rate of 5%/d, an accumulation of 2.6 mutations/10(6)/yr over the physiological accumulation was predicted. Indeed, we observed an elevated frequency of HPRT mutants in the CD4+ T cells of most patients with < 300 CD4+ T cells/mm3 of blood and in the CD8+ T cells of most patients with < 200 CD4+ T cells/mm3, consistent with an elevated and protracted increased division rate in both subsets. However, in earlier stages of the disease the mutant frequency in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was lower than in healthy controls. The cytokine production profile of most HPRT mutant CD4+ T cell clones from both healthy and HIV-infected patients was typical of T helper cells type 2 (high IL-4 and IL-10, low IFN-gamma), whereas the cytokine production pattern of wild-type clones was heterogeneous. The cytokine profile of CD8+ clones was indistinguishable between HPRT mutants and wild type. Our data provide evidence of increased CD4+ and CD8+ T cell recycling in the HIV-infected patients.
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(7)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
The role of mutation accumulation in HIV progression.
Alison P Galvani
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Proc. Biol. Sci.
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2005 |
Azathioprine Associated T-Cell Mutations in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus
Falta, Atkinson, Allegretta, Vacek, Albertini
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Scand J Immunol
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2000 |
Telomeres and HIV disease
Rita B Effros
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Microbes and Infection
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2000 |
Selection ofhprtMutant T Cells as Surrogates for Dividing Cells Reveals a Restricted T Cell Receptor BV Repertoire in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus
Michael T. Falta, Gregory K. Magin, Mark Allegretta, Lawrence Steinman, Mark A. Atkinson, Steven W. Brostoff, Richard J. Albertini
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Clinical Immunology
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1999 |
Limited CD4+ T-cell renewal in early HIV-1 infection: Effect of highly active antiretroviral therapy
Sylvain Fleury, Rob J. De Boer, G. Paolo Rizzardi, Katja C. Wolthers, Sigrid A. Otto, Craig C. Welbon, Cecilia Graziosi, Christian Knabenhans, Hugo Soudeyns, Piere-Alexander Bart, Serge Gallant, Jean-Marc Corpataux, Michel Gillet, Pascal Meylan, Pierre Schnyder, Jean-Yves Meuwly, William Spreen, Michel P. Glauser, Frank Miedema, Giuseppe Pantaleo
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Nat Med
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1998 |
Telomeres and HIV-1 infection: in search of exhaustion
K Wolthers
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Trends in Microbiology
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1998 |
Biphasic kinetics of peripheral blood T cells after triple combination therapy in HIV-1 infection: A composite of redistribution and proliferation
Nadine G. Pakker, Daan W. Notermans, Rob J. De Boer, Marijke T.L. Roos, Frank De Wolf, Andrew Hill, John M. Leonard, Sven A. Danner, Frank Miedema, Peter T.A. Schellekens
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Nat Med
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1998 |
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