A popular theory on how HIV attacks the body's immune system is wrong, a new study has found. Scientists have long believed that HIV causes the slow depletion of healthy white blood
A popular theory on how HIV attacks the body's immune system is wrong, a new study has found.
Scientists have long believed that HIV causes the slow depletion of healthy white blood cells -- the T cells which recognize infections so the body can fight them off -- by causing infected T cells to produce virus particles before dying.This ongoing cycle of infection, HIV production, reinfection and cell destruction has been called the "runaway" hypothesis.
But if this were so, the T cells would be killed off far too quickly, the researchers found.
Using a simple mathematical model, researchers in the United States and Britain showed the "runaway" model would deplete the body's healthy T cells in a matter of months, instead of the years it actually takes.
The results show that a "slow process must be active" in the depletion of the T cells, the authors wrote in the current issue of the journal PLoS Medicine.
Identifying this process "will provide a key insight into the nature of HIV disease and indicate potential new approaches to therapy," they concluded.
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"The virus is constantly mutating and there may be selection - in a Darwinian sense -- over time for 'fitter' mutants of the virus in an infected person," said lead author Andrew Yates of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.
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"The virus adaptation hypothesis requires a lot more experimental investigation, however, and is only a tentative conclusion."
Source-AFP
LIN/M