РефератыИностранный языкThThe Effects Of HIV Mutations On The

The Effects Of HIV Mutations On The

Immune System Essay, Research Paper


Science


C.J. Stimson


INTRODUCTION


The topic of this paper is the human immunodeficiency virus, HIV, and


whether or not mutations undergone by the virus allow it to survive in the


immune system. The cost of treating all persons with AIDS in 1993 in the


United States was $7.8 billion, and it is estimated that 20,000 new cases of


AIDS are reported every 3 months to the CDC. This question dealing with how


HIV survives in the immune system is of critical importance, not only in the


search for a cure for the virus and its inevitable syndrome, AIDS (Acquired


Immunodeficiency Syndrome), but also so that over 500,000 Americans already


infected with the virus could be saved. This is possible because if we know


that HIV survives through mutations then we might be able to come up with a


type of drug to retard these mutations allowing the immune system time to


expunge it before the onset of AIDS.


BACKGROUND


In order to be able to fully comprehend and analyze this question we must


first ascertain what HIV is, how the body attempts to counter the effects of


viruses in general, and how HIV infects the body.


Definition


HIV is the virus that causes AIDS. HIV is classified as a RNA Retrovirus.


A retrovirus uses RNA templates to produce DNA. For example, within the


core of HIV is a double molecule of ribonucleic acid, RNA. When the virus


invades a cell, this genetic material is replicated in the form of DNA .


But, in order to do so, HIV must first be able to produce a particular


enzyme that can construct a DNA molecule using an RNA template. This enzyme,


called RNA-directed DNA polymerase, is also referred to as reverse


transcriptase because it reverses the normal cellular process of


transcription. The DNA molecules produced by reverse transcription are then


inserted into the genetic material of the host cell, where they are


co-replicated with the host’s chromosomes; they are thereby distributed to


all daughter cells during subsequent cell divisions. Then in one or more of


these daughter cells, the virus produces RNA copies of its genetic material.


These new HIV clones become covered with protein coats and leave the cell to


find other host cells where they can repeat the life cycle.


The Body Fights Back


As viruses begin to invade the body, a few are consumed by macrophages,


which seize their antigens and display them on their own surfaces. Among


millions of helper T cells circulating in the bloodstream, a select few are


programmed to ?read? that antigen. Binding the macrophage, the T cell


becomes activated. Once activated, helper T cells begin to multiply. They


then stimulate the multiplication of those few killer T cells and B cells


that are sensitive to the invading viruses. As the number of B cells


increases, helper T cells signal them to start producing antibodies.


Meanwhile, some of the viruses have entered cells of the body – the only


place they are able to replicate. Killer T cells will sacrifice these cells


by chemically puncturing their membranes, letting the contents spill out,


thus disrupting the viral replication cycle. Antibodies then neutralize the


viruses by binding directly to their surfaces, preventing them from attacking


other cells. Additionally, they precipitate chemical reactions that actually


destroy the infected cells. As the infection is contained, suppresser T


cells halt the entire range of immune responses, preventing them from


spiraling out of control. Memory T and B cells are left in the blood and


lymphatic system, ready to move quickly should the same virus once again


invade the body.


HIV?s Life Cycle


In the initial stage of HIV infection, the virus colonizes helper T cells,


specifically CD4+ cells, and macrophages, while replicating itself relatively


unnoticed. As the amount of the virus soars, the number of helper cells


falls; macrophages die as well. The infected T cells perish as thousands of


new viral particles erupt from the cell membrane. Soon, though, cytotoxic T


and B lymphocytes kill many virus-infected cells and viral particles. These


effects limit viral growth and allow the body an opportunity to temporarily


restore its supply of helper cells to almost normal concentrations. It is at


this time the virus enters its second stage.


Throughout this second phase the immune system functions well, and the net


concentration of measurable virus remains relatively low. But after a period


of time, the viral level rises gradually, in parallel with a decline in the


helper population. These helper T and B lymphocytes are not lost because the


body?s ability to produce new helper cells is impaired, but because the virus


and cytotoxic cells are destroying them. This idea that HIV is not just


evading the immune system but attacking and disabling it is what


distinguishes HIV from other retroviruses.


THE THEORIES


The hypothesis in question is whether or not the mutations undergone by HIV


allow it to survive in the immune system. This idea was conceived by Martin


A. Nowak, an immunologist at the University of Oxford, and his coworkers when


they considered how HIV is able to avoid being detected by the immune system


after it has infected CD4+ cells. The basis for this hypothesis was


excogitated from the evolutionary theory and Nowak?s own theory on HIV


survival.


Evolutionary Theory


The evolutionary theory states that chance mutation in the genetic material


of an individual organism sometimes yields a trait that gives the organism a


survival advantage. That is, the affected individual is better able than its


peers to overcome obstacles to survival and is also better able to reproduce


prolifically. As time goes by, offspring that share the same trait become


most abundant in the population, outcompeting other members until another


individual acquires a more adaptive trait or until environmental conditions


change in a way that favors different characteristics. The pressures exerted


by the environment, then, determine which traits are selected for spread in a


population.


Nowak?s Theory on HIV Survival


When Nowak considered HIV?s life cycle it seemed evident that the microbe


was particularly well suited to evolve away from any pressures it confronted


(this idea being derived from the evolutionary theory). For example, its


genetic makeup changes constantly; a high mutation rate increases the


probability t

hat some genetic change will give rise to an advantageous trait.


This great genetic variability stems from a property of the viral enzyme


reverse transcriptase. As stated above, in a cell, HIV uses reverse


transcriptase to copy its RNA genome into double-strand DNA. The virus


mutates rapidly during this process because reverse transcriptase is rather


error prone. It has been estimated that each time the enzyme copies RNA into


DNA, the new DNA on average differs from that of the previous generation in


one site. This pattern makes HIV one of the most variable viruses known.


HIV?s high replication rate further increases the odds that a mutation


useful to the virus will arise. To fully appreciate the extent of HIV


multiplication, look at the numbers published on it; a billion new viral


particles are produced in an infected patient each day, and in the absence of


immune activity, the viral population would on average double every two


days.


With the knowledge of HIV?s great evolutionary potential in mind, Nowak and


his colleagues conceived a scenario they thought could explain how the virus


resists complete eradication and thus causes AIDS, usually after a long time


span. Their proposal assumed that constant mutation in viral genes would


lead to continuous production of viral variants able to evade the immune


defenses operating at any given time. Those variants would emerge when


genetic mutations led to changes in the structure of viral peptides


recognized by the immune system. Frequently such changes exert no effect on


immune activities, but sometimes they can cause a peptide to become invisible


to the body?s defenses. The affected viral particles, bearing fewer


recognizable peptides, would then become more difficult for the immune system


to detect.


The Model


Using the theory that he had developed on the survival of HIV, along with


the evolutionary theory, Nowak devised a model to simulate the dynamics and


growth of the virus. The equations that formed the heart of the model


reflected features that Nowak and his colleagues thought were important in


the progression of HIV infection: the virus impairs immune function mainly


by causing the death of CD4+ helper T cells, and higher levels of virus


result in more T cell death. Also, the virus continuously produces escape


mutants that avoid to some degree the current immunologic attack, and these


mutants spread in the viral population. After awhile, the immune system


finds the mutants efficiently, causing their population to shrink.


The simulation managed to reproduce the typically long delay between


infection by HIV and the eventual sharp rise in viral levels in the body. It


also provided an explanation for why the cycle of escape and repression does


not go on indefinitely but culminates in uncontrolled viral replication, the


almost complete loss of the helper T cell population and the onset of AIDS.


After the immune system becomes more active, survival becomes more


complicated for HIV. It is no longer enough to replicate freely; the virus


also has to be able to ward off immune attacks. Now is when Nowak predicts


that selection pressure will produce increasing diversity in peptides


recognized by immune forces. Once the defensive system has collapsed and is


no longer an obstacle to viral survival, the pressure to diversify


evaporates. In patients with AIDS, we would again anticipate selection for


the fastest-growing variants and a decrease in viral diversity.


Long-term studies involving a small number of patients have confirmed some


of the modeling predictions. These investigations, conducted by several


researchers–including Andrew J. Leigh Brown of the University of Edinburgh,


et al.–tracked the evolution of the so-called V3 segment of a protein in the


outer envelop of HIV for several years. V3 is a major target for antibodies


and is highly variable. As the computer simulation predicted, viral samples


obtained within a few weeks after patients become infected were alike in the


V3 region. But during subsequent years, the region diversified, thus causing


a rapid increase in the amount of V3 variants and a progressive decrease in


the CD4+ cell count.


The model presented by Nowak is extremely difficult to verify with clinical


tests alone, largely because the diversified interactions between the virus


and the immune system are impossible to monitor in detail. Consequently,


Nowak turned to a computer simulation in which an initially homogeneous viral


population evolved in response to immunologic pressure. He reasoned that if


the mathematical model produced the known patterns of HIV progression, he


could conclude the evolutionary scenario had some merit. To verify his


model, he turned to the experiments done on the V3 protein segment in HIV.


These experiments demonstrated that the peptides were mutating and that


these mutations were leading to a decline in helper lymphocytes.


CONCLUSION


Before we begin to answer the question that this paper is investigating, an


evaluation of our primary experiment source is necessary, this being a


publication of Nowak?s model. Upon evaluation of this source, a problem is


exposed, this being that because there was no experiment performed to


substantiate this model, we have no idea if the modeling predictions are


true. Although there were previous non-directly related experiments ( i.e.,


V3 experiment) that Nowak referred to to rationalize his model there was


never an experiment done solely based on the model. Because the V3 findings


were in accord with the findings of Nowak?s model, we can assume that the


model has some merit.


This absence of an experiment is what leads to the boundaries that one


encounters when experimenting with HIV mutations. These boundaries being


that because HIV replicates and mutates non-linearly, it is impossible to


chronicle all its viral dynamics scrupulously.


The lack of experimental data based on Nowak?s model along with the


inadequacy of experiments dealing with HIV mutations leads to the conclusion


that at present, there is no answer to this question. Although, other


questions have been exposed, including: does the virus mutate at random or


is it systematic? And how does the virus know where to mutate in order to


continue surviving undetected?


These are all questions that must first be answered before we even begin to


try to determine if viral mutations are what allows HIV to survive in the


immune system.

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