Abstract

BackgroundHTLV-I causes the disabling inflammatory disease HAM/TSP: there is no vaccine, no satisfactory treatment and no means of assessing the risk of disease or prognosis in infected people. Like many immunopathological diseases with a viral etiology the outcome of infection is thought to depend on the virus-host immunology interaction. However the dynamic virus-host interaction is complex and current models of HAM/TSP pathogenesis are conflicting. The CD8+ cell response is thought to be a determinant of both HTLV-I proviral load and disease status but its effects can obscure other factors.ResultsWe show here that in the absence of CD8+ cells, CD4+ lymphocytes from HAM/TSP patients expressed HTLV-I protein significantly more readily than lymphocytes from asymptomatic carriers of similar proviral load (P = 0.017). A high rate of viral protein expression was significantly associated with a large increase in the prevalence of HAM/TSP (P = 0.031, 89% of cases correctly classified). Additionally, a high rate of Tax expression and a low CD8+ cell efficiency were independently significantly associated with a high proviral load (P = 0.005, P = 0.003 respectively).ConclusionThese results disentangle the complex relationship between immune surveillance, proviral load, inflammatory disease and viral protein expression and indicate that increased protein expression may play an important role in HAM/TSP pathogenesis. This has important implications for therapy since it suggests that interventions should aim to reduce Tax expression rather than proviral load per se.

Highlights

  • Human T-Lymphotropic Virus Type I (HTLV-I) causes the disabling inflammatory disease HTLV-I-associated myelopathy/ tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP): there is no vaccine, no satisfactory treatment and no means of assessing the risk of disease or prognosis in infected people

  • Tax expression was higher in HAM/TSP patients than asymptomatic carrier (AC) Tax protein is the first HTLV-1 protein to be expressed in an infected cell; we focused on Tax protein as an index of HTLV-1 proviral expression

  • The two factors most often associated with HAM/TSP are high proviral load [1] and high HTLV-I-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) frequency [2,3], suggesting that virus-host immunology interactions are important in determining the outcome of infection

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Summary

Introduction

HTLV-I causes the disabling inflammatory disease HAM/TSP: there is no vaccine, no satisfactory treatment and no means of assessing the risk of disease or prognosis in infected people. Like many immunopathological diseases with a viral etiology the outcome of infection is thought to depend on the virus-host immunology interaction. The dynamic virus-host interaction is complex and current models of HAM/TSP pathogenesis are conflicting. The CD8+ cell response is thought to be a determinant of both HTLV-I proviral load and disease status but its effects can obscure other factors. Retrovirology 2005, 2:75 http://www.retrovirology.com/content/2/1/75 that this was more likely to be directly associated with the amount of viral antigen rather than the amount of proviral DNA. We investigated viral protein expression in cells from HAM/TSP patients and ACs following ex vivo CD8+ cell depletion with the aim of quantifying the relative importance of proviral load, viral protein expression and CTL surveillance in HTLV-I infection

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