Herpesviruses, the immune system, and AIDS
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Herpesviruses, the immune system, and AIDS
(Developments in medical virology, 6)
Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1990
Available at 7 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Shortly after the reeognition of the aequired immunodefieieney syndrome (AIDS) in 1981 (1-3), it was hypothesized that herpesviruses may play an important role in the etiology or pathogenesis of this newly identified syndrome (4,5). This theory was based on the faet that infeetion with herpesviruses was a prominent elinieal feature in nearly all patients with AIDS (3-5). Chronie mueocutaneous herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections were one of the first opportunistie infeetions deseribed in patients with AIDS (3), and both cytomegalovirus (CMV) and HSV infections were extremely common in individuals identified to be at highest risk for aequiring AIDS, such as homosexual men, intravenous drug users and hemophiliaes (4-8). CMVand Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) were also prominent infeetions whieh were suspected as possible etiologic agents of the prolonged fever, wasting, and Iymphadenopathy that often precedes AIDS, frequently referred to as the chronie Iymphadenopathy syndrome (9,10). Subsequent elinieal studies have indeed demonstrated that infeetions with HSV, CMV, EBV, and even varieella- zoster virus (VZV) are frequent opportunistic infeetions wh ich oeeur among AIDS patients (11-14).
Several of the opportunistie infeetions caused by herpesviruses include encephalitis, chorioretinitis, hairy leukoplakia, esophagitis, enteritis, colitis, Burkitt's lymphoma, primary CNS lymphoma, zoster, and there has even been speculation about the role of CMV in the pathogenesis of Kaposi's sareoma (15,16). Furthermore, the herpesviruses, partieularly CMV and EBV have been known to be strongly associated with immunosuppression, partieularly of cell-mediated immune functions, which further supported the hypothesis that herpesviruses may contribute to the immune defects that eharacterize AIDS.
Table of Contents
1. Epidemiologic and Serologic Evidence for a Role of Herpesviruses in HIV Infection.- 2. The Cell Biology of Antigen Processing: A Review.- 3. Molecular Aspects of Human B and T Lymphocyte Responses to HIV.- 4. The Control of Human Herpesvirus Infections by Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL): A Comparison to AIDS Virus Specific CTL.- 5. CMV Infections and Immune Responses.- 6. Immunobiology of EBV Infections and Potential Interactions with HIV.- 7. The Role of Immunosuppression in Herpes Simplex Virus Pathogenesis and its Relationship to AIDS.- 8. Natural Resistance to Herpes Simplex Virus Infections: The Macrophage-Interferon Axis.- 9. Innate Resistance to HSV-1 Infection: Mouse Macrophage Inhibition of Viral Replication.- 10. Potential Interactions if HIV and the Neurotropic Herpesviruses in AIDS Encephalopathy.- 11. Herpesviruses as Co-Factors in the Immunopathogenesis of AIDS.- 12. Trans-Activation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Promoter by Heterologous Virus Infection.- 13. Subunit Viral Vaccines: Prophylactic and Therapeutic Use.- 14. Antisense Nucleic Acid Analogues as Potential Antiviral Agents.
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