Title of article
Mathematical modeling of viral kinetics under immune control during primary HIV-1 infection
Author/Authors
Burg، نويسنده , , David and Rong، نويسنده , , Libin and Neumann، نويسنده , , Avidan U. and Dahari، نويسنده , , Harel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
9
From page
751
To page
759
Abstract
Primary human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is characterized by an initial exponential increase of viral load in peripheral blood reaching a peak, followed by a rapid decline to the viral setpoint. Although the target-cell-limited model can account for part of the viral kinetics observed early in infection [Phillips, 1996. Reduction of HIV concentration during acute infection: independence from a specific immune response. Science 271 (5248), 497–499], it frequently predicts highly oscillatory kinetics after peak viremia, which is not typically observed in clinical data. Furthermore, the target-cell-limited model is unable to predict long-term viral kinetics, unless a delayed immune effect is assumed [Stafford et al., 2000. Modeling plasma virus concentration during primary HIV infection. J. Theor. Biol. 203 (3), 285–301]. We show here that extending the target-cell-limited model, by implementing a saturation term for HIV-infected cell loss dependent upon infected cell levels, is able to reproduce the diverse observed viral kinetic patterns without the assumption of a delayed immune response. Our results suggest that the immune response may have significant effect on the control of the virus during primary infection and may support experimental observations that an anti-HIV immune response is already functional during peak viremia.
Keywords
Primary infection , Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) , Viral dynamics , Immune control
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1539803
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