Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections have been characterized by both polyclonal B-cell activation and enhanced responsiveness to B-cell growth factors on one hand and the loss of specific antibody (Ab) responses and refractoriness to the normal signals for B-cell activation on the other. Histopathological studies of lymph node from HIV- and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected individuals have indicated initial follicular hyperplasia and the appearance of large irregular germinal centers that undergo progressive involution concomitant with follicular dendritic-cell (FDC) disruption. During this process, follicular dendritic-cell -enriched lymph-node-cell cultures exhibit increased ability to induce cluster formation ('in vitro germinal centers'), lymphocyte proliferation and antibody production compared to uninfected controls. This paper discusses how enhanced FDC-B-cell interaction within SIV-infected germinal centers may result in a reduced ability to select high-affinity B cells and alter the dynamics of antibody-producing-cell and memory-cell generation resulting in the observed hyperactivity.
CITATION STYLE
Rosenberg, Y. J., Lewis, M. G., & Kosco-Vilbois, M. H. (1998). Enhanced follicular dendritic cell-B cell interaction in HIV and SIV infections and its potential role in polyclonal B cell activation. In Developmental Immunology (Vol. 6, pp. 61–70). Harwood Academic Publishers GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1155/1998/34014
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.