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Nef-mediated supression of
T cell activation was lost in a lentiviral lineage that
gave rise to HIV-1
Schindler M, Munch J, Kutsch O, Li H, Santiago ML, Bibollet-Ruche
F, Muller-Trutwin MC, Novembre FJ, Peeters M, Courgnaud V,
Bailes E, Roques P, Sodoroa DL, Silvestri G, Sharp PM, Hahn
BH and Kirchhoff F. (2006) Cell 125: 1034-1035.
High-level immune activation and T cell apoptosis represent
a hallmark of HIV-1 infection that is absent from nonpathogenic
SIV infections in natural primate hosts. The mechanisms
causing these varying levels of immune activation are not
understood. Here, we report that nef alleles from the great
majority of primate lentiviruses, including HIV-2, downmodulate
TCR-CD3 from infected T cells, thereby blocking their responsiveness
to activation. In contrast, nef alleles from HIV-1 and
a subset of closely related SIVs fail to downregulate TCR-CD3
and to inhibit cell death. Thus, Nef-mediated suppression
of T cell activation is a fundamental property of primate
lentiviruses that likely evolved to maintain viral persistence
in the context of an intact host immune system. This function
was lost during viral evolution in a lineage that gave
rise to HIV-1 and may have predisposed the simian precursor
of HIV-1 for greater pathogenicity in humans.
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