T Regulatory Cells and HIV Infection

José M. Sempere 1, Vicente Soriano 2, José M. Benito 1

1 NULL; 2 UNIR Health Sciences School and Medical Center, Universidad Internacional de La Rioja, Madrid, Spain

*Correspondence: José M. Benito, Email not available

Abstract

Several issues of HIV pathogenesis remain unsolved. Among them, the reason for uncontrolled viralreplication in the majority of infected patients is one of the most investigated but still not completelyunderstood. In the last four years a new player has been incorporated into the HIV field: T regulatory(Treg) cells. They are a subset of CD4+ T-cells whose main function is to maintain peripheral tolerancein order to avoid autoimmunity. However, their role in chronic viral and parasitic infections has alsobeen recognized. Several papers have been published in the last years on the potential role of thesecells on HIV disease pathogenesis. From the data available so far, two main, nonexclusive roles havebeen attributed to Treg cells in HIV: a detrimental effect mediated through the impairment of HIVspecificresponses, and a beneficial effect by limiting immune activation. The topic is currentlyhighly controversial for different reasons, one of the most important being the lack of standardizedassays to measure levels and function of Treg cells

Keywords: HIV. Treg cells. T-cell responses. Immune activation.

Contents

DOI not available
    DOI not available