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Thymic HIV-2 infection uncovers posttranscriptional control of viral replication in human thymocytes.

Helena Nunes-CabaçoPaula MatosoRussell B FoxallRita TendeiroAna R PiresTânia CarvalhoAna I PinheiroRui S SoaresAna E Sousa
Published in: Journal of virology (2014)
HIV-1 infects the thymus, leading to a decrease in CD4 T-cell production that contributes to the characteristic CD4 T-cell loss. HIV-2 infection is associated with a very low rate of progression to AIDS and is therefore considered a unique naturally occurring model of attenuated HIV disease. HIV-2-infected individuals feature low to undetectable plasma viral loads, in spite of the numbers of circulating infected T cells being similar to those found in patients infected with HIV-1. We assessed, for the first time, the direct impact of HIV-2 infection on the human thymus. We show that HIV-2 is able to infect the thymus but that the HIV-2 replication cycle in thymocytes is impaired. We propose that this system will be important to devise immunotherapies that target viral production, aiding the design of future therapeutic strategies for HIV control.
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