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B
Cells Gone Bad: Researchers Uncover How HIV Causes Abnormalities
in Cells That Produce Antibodies
HIV
wreaks much of its damage by targeting the "orchestra conductor"
of the immune system, a key class of T cells--CD4+
T cells--whose destructive relationship with HIV has
been well-studied by AIDS researchers. More poorly understood has
been the effect of HIV on another key class of immune cells, antibody-producing
B cells.
The
malfunction of B cells in HIV-infected patients was first described
more than 20 years ago by H. Clifford Lane, M.D., Anthony S. Fauci,
M.D., and colleagues at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Now,
writing in the September 7, 2004 online edition of The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Dr. Fauci, Susan Moir, Ph.D., Angela
Malaspina, Ph.D., and their colleagues identify a number of pathways
that HIV activates to damage or destroy B cells.
"Our
findings further illuminate the insidious nature of HIV," notes
Dr. Moir, head of the B Cell HIV Unit in the Immunopathogenesis
Section of the NIAID Laboratory of Immunoregulation (LIR). "The
virus has numerous ways of paralyzing or destroying the very cells
of the immune system that are supposed to eliminate it."
One
of the most paradoxical properties of HIV is the fact that it activates
the immune system, which is necessary for an appropriate immune
response, at the same time that the activation itself leads to deleterious
effects. "During the course of HIV infection, the B cells of
people whose virus is not kept under control with antiretroviral
drugs become progressively dysfunctional through virus-driven, aberrant
activation," explains Dr. Fauci, who is NIAID director and
LIR chief.
These
abnormal B cells exhibit visible changes in their structure and
surface. They also overproduce nonessential antibodies, fail to
respond properly to normal immune system signals, and have an increased
chance of dying through apoptosis, a process also called "programmed
cell death."
In
their experiments, Drs. Fauci and Moir and their LIR colleagues,
in collaboration with scientists from Human Genome Sciences (Rockville,
MD), set out to uncover what drives B-cell abnormalities in HIV
infection. Using gene chip technology developed by Human Genome
Sciences, they probed thousands of genes taken from B cells of HIV-infected
patients. The researchers compared which genes were "turned
on," or expressed, in the patients whose viral burden was high
with profiles of gene expression in patients whose virus was controlled
by antiretroviral therapy. The research team also examined gene
expression in healthy HIV-negative individuals.
"We
found more than 40 genes that were 'over-expressed' in the group
with high HIV levels compared with the two other groups," says
Dr. Moir. Most of these genes, she notes, belong to either one of
two major physiologic pathways. Of note, in patients with HIV levels,
certain elements from both pathways helped prime B cells for apoptosis.
The
researchers not only discovered new pathways that are perturbed
during the course of HIV infection, but also illuminated how HIV
affects a key B-cell survival system. The principal player in this
survival system, B Lymphocyte Stimulator (BLyS), was discovered
by Human Genome Sciences.
The
discovery was first reported in a scientific journal in 1999. BLyS
(also known as BAFF) and BAFF-R--one of three known docking molecules
for BLyS on B cells--are essential for B-cell development and survival.
Dr. Moir and her team discovered that B cells of patients with high
levels of HIV have reduced levels of BAFF-R on their surfaces, making
these B cells more susceptible to cell death.
The
LIR researchers plan to examine whether similar pathways are triggered
in other cells of the immune system that are over-activated by HIV,
including CD8+
T cells, CD4+
T cells and natural killer (NK) cells.
"Whether
common or distinct pathways are involved, these new findings help
explain one of the driving forces of HIV
immunopathogenesis and may lead to therapeutic strategies
aimed at quelling the aberrant levels of immune cell activation,"
notes Dr. Fauci.
NIAID
is a component of the National Institutes of Health, an agency of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIAID supports
basic and applied research to prevent, diagnose and treat infectious
diseases such as HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections,
influenza, tuberculosis, malaria and illness from potential agents
of bioterrorism. NIAID also supports research on transplantation
and immune-related illnesses, including autoimmune disorders, asthma
and allergies.
09/10/04
Source
NIAID
News
Reference
S
Moir and others. Decreased survival of B cells of HIV-viremic patients
mediated by altered expression of receptors of the TNF superfamily. Journal of Experimental Medicine 200(5): 587-599. September 7,
2004.
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