City
Epaper

Study tracks cells that host HIV

By ANI | Updated: February 5, 2022 17:30 IST

A new research has found the lifespans and location of the cells that are responsible for producing HIV, preventing its eradication.

Open in App

A new research has found the lifespans and location of the cells that are responsible for producing HIV, preventing its eradication.

The study has been published in the 'Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Journal'.

"When chronically HIV-1 infected individuals are put on potent antiretroviral drug therapy, the amount of virus in their blood decreases," said Los Alamos National Laboratory Senior Fellow Alan Perelson.

He and collaborator David D. Ho, MD, now at Columbia University School of Medicine, found that "the viral decline occurred in two distinct phases, a fast first phase followed by a slow second phase."

Using a mathematical model of viral infection and treatment developed by Perelson, the team concluded that the two-phase decline reflected the fact that HIV infected two distinct cell populations that produced HIV. One population produced the majority of the virus, but lived only a day or so. The decay of this population according to the model was responsible for the first phase decline of the virus in the blood.

The second cell population, which released virus at a slower rate, lived a matter of weeks while producing virus, and their loss according to the model was responsible for the second phase of viral decay seen in the blood.

Now, Robert Siliciano, MD, from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and his team working with Perelson and Ruy Ribeiro from the Theoretical Biology and Biophysics Group at Los Alamos National Laboratory searched for these hypothesized cells with different decay rates.

Siliciano's group isolated HIV-infected cells in the blood of 17 people living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy twice a month for the first three months after the initiation of the therapy, and then every month for a year. They found that very few of the short-lived infected cells responsible for the first phase of viral decay were circulating in the blood, suggesting that these cells most likely reside in tissues, such as lymph nodes and the spleen.

Instead, they found cells in the blood that carried an intact HIV genome and which decayed with a half-life of about two weeks. These are presumably the cells responsible for the second phase of viral decay predicted by Perelson and Ho.

After about three months on treatment, the remaining infected cells with intact HIV genomes decayed even more slowly, now with a half-life of about 19 months. These cells may become part of the latent-infected cell reservoir, which if therapy is stopped re-seeds the infection and virus then becomes detectable usually in a matter of weeks.

The funding: National Institutes of Health (NIH)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: National Academy of SciencesLos alamos national laboratoryRobert silicianoRuy ribeiro
Open in App

Related Stories

HealthStudy discovers secrets of high-elevation pregnancies

TechnologyStudy finds secrets of high-elevation pregnancies

HealthSurge of activity correlated in dying brain: Study

HealthStudy reveals surge of activity linked to consciousness in dying brain

InternationalIsraeli researchers develop drought-resistant tomato

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyTech Mahindra headcount drops by 1,757 in Q4

TechnologyCentre extends financial aid to indigenous indoor air purification solution

TechnologyIndia to soon launch safety assessment rating for trucks and heavy vehicles: Nitin Gadkari

TechnologyBroadband subscribers stand at 944.04 million in Feb, tele-density up: TRAI

TechnologyIndia achieves breakthrough in gene therapy for haemophilia: Minister