New knowledge on how HIV beats the body's early immune response
The findings, published in the Journal of Virology , show how HIV induces antiviral interferon stimulated genes in the absence of interferon production. Lead author of the study, Dr Najla Nasr said it's like a prize fight, with both HIV and the body's immune response both fighting for supremacy. "When a person is infected with HIV, the virus infects immune cells and knocks out the body's interferon production; the first line of defence in our bodies. "When interferon production is inhibited, the virus infects adjacent cells and spreads throughout the body. "Surprisingly, we found that although HIV inhibits interferon production it also stimulates more than twenty antiviral interferon-stimulated genes -- or ISGs -- in its key target cells. This is the largest effect yet shown by any individual virus. "ISGs are critical for controlling virus infections. They provide the earliest protective response to counter invading pathogens, but paradoxica...