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Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology
Medknow Publications on behalf of Indian Association of Medical Microbiology
ISSN: 0255-0857
EISSN: 0255-0857
Vol. 25, No. 4, 2007, pp. 311-322
Bioline Code: mb07092
Full paper language: English
Document type: Review Article
Document available free of charge

Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology, Vol. 25, No. 4, 2007, pp. 311-322

 en Immunobiology of human imunodeficiency virus infection
Tripathi, P. & Agrawal, S.

Abstract

After the discovery of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and its role in the causation of most devastating epidemic acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), there has been an increasing trend to decipher the mechanism of infection and to understand why it cannot be controlled by our immune system. By evolution, our immune system has been empowered and enough trained to recognize, elicit immune response and remove antigens and pathogens from the body. Simultaneously, HIV has also gained enough mechanism to escape the natural immune response. On one hand, it downregulates HLA class I antigens, which may present viral antigens to specific CD8 + T cells; on the other hand, the viral genome get mutated very readily under the selection pressure of specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes. The high mutation rate and convertibility of its genotype makes it a moving target and poses a prime hurdle in vaccine development. This review explains how HIV enters into the cell, how it resists the host immune response and how HIV manages to escape from it and establish in the human body.

Keywords
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome, human immunodeficiency virus, macrophages, NK cells, T cell

 
© Copyright 2007 Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology.
Alternative site location: http://www.ijmm.org

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