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KITSO AIDS Training Program Lecture 2: HIV Pathophysiology and Epidemiology delivered by Dr. Daniel J. Baxter, ACHAP 1 Learning Objectives • Lifecycle of HIV-1. • CD4 cell and host defense system. • Natural history of HIV-1 disease. • Immune responses to HIV-1 and mechanisms of immune evasion by HIV. 2 Worldwide Distribution of HIV-1 Viral Subtypes B B Northern America: 920,000 Western Europe: 540,000 Northern Africa & Middle East: 400,000 Caribbean: 390,000 Latin America: 1.4 million : B C Eastern Europe & Central Asia: 700,000 C C,E Eastern Asia & the Pacific: 640,000 Southern & Southeastern Asia: 7 million Sub - Saharan Africa: 25.3 million Source: WHO/UNAIDS (data as of December, 2000) Australia & New Zealand: 15,000 B 3 Viruses • A virus is the simplest, most primitive life form on earth. • A virus is unable to replicate (reproduce) on its own and must first infect a living cell in order to replicate. • HIV is a retrovirus. A retrovirus is an RNA virus which uses DNA as an intermediary for its replication. 4 Human Immunodeficiency Virus 5 HIV-1 Particle 6 HIV Life Cycle 7 HIV Life Cycle Reverse Transcriptase HIV RNA RNA Protease RNA RNA RNA RNA DNA RNA RNA RNA CD4 T -Lymphocyte Proviral DNA 8 HIV Variability 9 HIV Variability • HIV has enormous potential for change (mutations) • The HIV copies in an infected person are not all identical but are rather like a swarm of closely related viruses. • Reverse Transcriptase is a very error-prone enzyme. 10 Effects of HIV Mutations • Mostly of no consequence. • Viral fitness increased or decreased. • Viral infectivity/pathogenicity increased or decreased. • Escape from immune control. • ARV drug resistance. 11 Immunology 12 Host Defense System Self versus Non-Self (antigen) Adaptive Immunity Innate Immunity -Skin, mucosa -Cells B-Lymphocytes T-Lymphocytes White blood cells Macrophages -Complement Plasma cells CD4 cells CD8 cells High Specificity/ Memory Cells 13 Helper Function of CD4 Cells Macrophage T helper cell (CD4) B Lymphocyte Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte (CD8) Infected cell Antibody secreting (plasma) cell Killed 14 White Blood Cell Distribution Absolute/Total cells/uL Neutrophils 4000 Lymphocytes CD4 1000 CD8 500 Percent 55% WBC 30% Lymphocytes Basophils Eosinophils Monocytes 15 CD4 Counts in Botswana • Uninfected: 750 cells/uL (IQR: 560-900) • Asymptomatic HIV-1 positive: 350 cells/uL (IQR: 268-574) • Patients with AIDS: 121 cells/uL (IQR: 50-250) 16 Surrogate Markers of HIV Disease • CD4 is an indicator of the strength of the immune system. • Viral Load is an indicator of the amount of viral replication. 17 Natural History of HIV Infection 18 Natural History of HIV-1 Infection Acute Retroviral Syndrome 1-12 weeks Clinical AIDS Latency 6-10 years 1-2 years 19 Acute Retroviral Syndrome 1-12 weeks 8-10 years 1-2 years 20 Acute Retroviral Syndrome • Non-specific ‘flu-like’ symptoms; – Fever – Fatigue – Pharyngitis – Lymphadenopathy – Rash 21 Pathogenesis of Acute HIV-1 Infection • Initial infection of CD4 cells and macrophages at site of exposure. • Dissemination of infection to lymph nodes. • Burst of viral replication results in intense viremia. • Development of humoral immunity (HIVspecific antibodies). • Development of cellular immunity (HIV-specific CD4 and CD8 cells). 22 Acute HIV-1 Infection HIV-antibodies CD4 cell count Viral load 0 3 6 12 weeks after HIV infection23 Clinical Latency 1-12 weeks 6-10 years 1-2 years 24 Clinical Latency • At CD4 cell counts over 500 cells/uL many complications overlap with conditions found in uninfected populations (bacterial pneumonia, tuberculosis, minor skin conditions), but they may be more frequent. • At CD4 counts between 200 and 500 cells/uL other conditions and opportunistic infections may begin to appear (Kaposi’s sarcoma, oral/genital candidiasis, herpes 25 zoster, etc.). Pathogenesis of Chronic HIV-1 Infection • High turnover of CD4 cells. – Continuous destruction and compensatory increased production of CD4 Lymphocytes. • Viral load plateaus at viral set point. • Non-specific, generalized, immune activation resulting in immune dysfunction. • Viral reservoirs in resting infected cells. 26 Relative Control of HIV-1: Viral Set Points Predictor for: - Disease progression - Risk of transmission Year 1 27 AIDS 1-12 weeks 6-10 years 1-2 years 28 29 Immune Evasion by HIV 30 Inability to Eradicate HIV-1 Infection • CD4 T cell decline • CTL response inadequate • Viral reservoir • Viral infection in sanctuaries (brain and genito-urinary tract) • Viral persistence in lymphoid tissue • Latency – archiving in resting cells • Mutational Potential of HIV-1 • Escape of HIV from CD8 immune response and neutralizing antibodies 31 CD4 count Viral load Variability of Response to HIV Infection Typical Progressor Viral load CD4 count Time Time Rapid Progressor 32 Immune Response in Children • Viral set point is higher in children. • Disease progression similar to adults. • 15-20% of children develop AIDS or die within 1 year. • 10% survive for a prolonged period (5-6 years). 33 Immune Response in Children (2) • Because the infant’s immune system is immature, disease progression is expressed as CD4%. • CD4% is the percent of total lymphocytes that are CD4 cells. – e.g., if total lymphocytes are 4000 cells per uL and 1000 of these cells are CD4 cells, the CD4% is 25%. 34 HIV Transmission and Prevention • Modes of Transmission • Mucosa (genital/rectal) • Blood (transfusion, MTCT, needle stick injury) • Breast Feeding • Prevention • • • • • Avoidance of infected mucosal secretions Safe blood transfusion service Post-exposure prophylaxis Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Avoidance of breast feeding • Universal precautions • Hand washing • Safe disposal of infected material 35 Summary • HIV life cycle involves transcription of viral RNA into DNA and integration into human genome. • Mutational potential of HIV-1 results in worldwide diversity (subtypes), viral escape from immune response and development of drug resistance. • Viral replication persists throughout infection. • Fundamental pathology is the inability of the host immune system to eradicate HIV infection, which results in progressive destruction of the immune system. 36