Immunological and virological characteristics of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 superinfection: implications in vaccine design

被引:0
|
作者
Yang Gao
Wen Tian
Xiaoxu Han
Feng Gao
机构
[1] China Medical University,Key Laboratory of AIDS Immunology of National Health and Family Planning Commission, Department of Laboratory Medicine, The First Affiliated Hospital
[2] Jilin University,National Engineering Laboratory for AIDS Vaccine, School of Life Sciences
[3] Duke University Medical Center,Department of Medicine
来源
Frontiers of Medicine | 2017年 / 11卷
关键词
human immunodeficiency virus type I; superinfection; incidence; immune response;
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学科分类号
摘要
Superinfection is frequently detected among individuals infected by human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1). Superinfection occurs at similar frequencies at acute and chronic infection stages but less frequently than primary infection. This observation indicates that the immune responses elicited by natural HIV-1 infection may play a role in curb of superinfection; however, these responses are not sufficiently strong to completely prevent superinfection. Thus, a successful HIV-1 vaccine likely needs to induce more potent and broader immune responses than those elicited by primary infection. On the other hand, potent and broad neutralization responses are more often detected after superinfection than during monoinfection. This suggests that broadly neutralizing antibodies are more likely induced by sequential immunization of multiple different immunogens than with only one form of envelope glycoprotein immunogens. Understanding why the protection from superinfection by immunity induced by primary infection is insufficient and if superinfection can lead to cross-reactive immune responses will be highly informative for HIV-1 vaccine design.
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页码:480 / 489
页数:9
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