Most patients infected with HIV-1 develop AIDS unless they receive antiretroviral medication. However, a small number of HIV-infected individuals with high viral titers remain disease free and do not experience progressive immunosuppression, even in the absence of therapy. Such individuals are labeled long-term nonprogressors (LTNPs) and are characterized by a series of laboratory parameters that are usually compromised in HIV-1 carriers who ultimately develop AIDS. In particular, LTNPs possess a high frequency of peripheral CD4plus; T cells, as well as a low level of spontaneous apoptosis, correlating with a normal mitochondrial transmembrane potential (Δψm) among circulating T cells. It has long been assumed that, as an experimentum naturae, LTNPs might furnish valuable clues for the identification of molecular determinants of HIV-1 pathogenesis. A study by Badley and colleagues involving LTNPs, reported in this issue of the JCI (1), strongly suggests that viral protein R (Vpr) is a major HIV-1 virulence factor.
Kerstin Zander, Michael P. Sherman, Uwe Tessmer, Karsten Bruns, Victor Wray, Alexander Prechtel, Evelyn Schubert, Peter Henklein, Jeremy Luban, Jason Neidleman, Warner C. Greene, Ulrich Sigmar Schubert
Peter Henklein, Karsten Bruns, Michael P. Sherman, Uwe Tessmer, Kai Licha, Jeffrey B. Kopp, Carlos M. C. de Noronha, Warner C. Greene, Victor Wray, Ulrich Sigmar Schubert
Neeti Agarwal, Dinakar Iyer, Sanjeet Patel, Rajagopal V. Sekhar, Terry M. Phillips, Ulrich Sigmar Schubert, Toni Oplt, Eric D. Buras, Susan L. Samson, Jacob Couturier, Dorothy E. Lewis, Maria C. Rodriguez‐Barradas, Farook Jahoor, Tomoshige Kino, Jeffrey B. Kopp, Ashok Balasubramanyam
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