Quantification of the virus-host interaction in human T lymphotropic virus I infection

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Abstract

Background: HTLV-I causes the disabling inflammatory disease HAM/TSP: there is no vaccine, no satisfactory treatment and no means of assessing the risk of disease or prognosis in infected people. Like many immunopathological diseases with a viral etiology the outcome of infection is thought to depend on the virus-host immunology interaction. However the dynamic virus-host interaction is complex and current models of HAM/TSP pathogenesis are conflicting. The CD8+ cell response is thought to be a determinant of both HTLV-I proviral load and disease status but its effects can obscure other factors. Results: We show here that in the absence of CD8+ cells, CD4+ lymphocytes from HAM/TSP patients expressed HTLV-I protein significantly more readily than lymphocytes from asymptomatic carriers of similar proviral load (P=0.017). A high rate of viral protein expression was significantly associated with a large increase in the prevalence of HAM/TSP (P=0.031, 89% of cases correctly classified). Additionally, a high rate of Tax expression and a low CD8+ cell efficiency were independently significantly associated with a high proviral load (P=0.005, P=0.003 respectively). Conclusions: These results disentangle the complex relationship between immune surveillance, proviral load, inflammatory disease and viral protein expression and indicate that increased protein expression may play an important role in HAM/TSP pathogenesis. This has important implications for therapy since it suggests that interventions should aim to reduce Tax expression rather than proviral load per se. © 2005 Asquith et al., licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Asquith, B., Mosley, A. J., Heaps, A., Tanaka, Y., Taylor, G. P., McLean, A. R., & Bangham, C. R. M. (2005). Quantification of the virus-host interaction in human T lymphotropic virus I infection. Retrovirology, 2. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-2-75

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