Cellular immune responses to HIV

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Abstract

The cellular immune response to the human immunodeficiency virus, mediated by T lymphocytes, seems strong but fails to control the infection completely. In most virus infections, T cells either eliminate the virus or suppress it indefinitely as a harmless, persisting infection. But the human immunodeficiency virus undermines this control by infecting key immune cells, thereby impairing the response of both the infected CD4+ T cells and the uninfected CD8+ T cells. The failure of the latter to function efficiently facilitates the escape of virus from immune control and the collapse of the whole immune system.

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APA

McMichael, A. J., & Rowland-Jones, S. L. (2001, April 19). Cellular immune responses to HIV. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/35073658

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