HIV ATLAS

Social Media for HIV, TB & Malaria!

English Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Armenian Azerbaijani Basque Belarusian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician Georgian German Greek Haitian Creole Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Irish Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Malay Maltese Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Urdu Vietnamese Welsh Yiddish

How chronic viral infections impact on antigen-specific T-cell responses.

How chronic viral infections impact on antigen-specific T-cell responses. - Related Articles
How chronic viral infections impact on antigen-specific T-cell responses.
Eur J Immunol. 2010 Jan 13;
Authors: Frebel H, Richter K, Oxenius A
Persistent viral infections are, by definition, associated with ineffective antiviral immunity, in particular those infections caused by viruses that are highly productive and replicative (including HIV, HBV and HCV). The reasons for ineffective antiviral immunity in these types of infections are complex and manifold, and only recently a more comprehensive picture of the parameters responsible for attenuation of immune function is emerging. One reason for poor viral control in these types of infections is the functional deterioration of antiviral T-cell responses and understanding the underlying mechanisms is of key importance. This review summarizes our current knowledge of cell-intrinsic and cell-extrinsic parameters that contribute to T-cell exhaustion during chronic viral infections and discusses related implications for host survival, immunopathology, and control of infection.
PMID: 20077405 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
[PubMed-HIV]

By jenna - Posted on 18 January 2010 Share this

HIV ATLAS

Job Central

Classified Blogs

Event Central

Classified Ads

IEC Central

Videos

Resources

Monthly archive

Latest Jobs (Weekly)

Stay informed on our latest news!

Syndicate content

Classified Resources