mBio (Jul 2014)

New Clues to Understanding HIV Nonprogressors: Low Cholesterol Blocks HIV <italic toggle="yes">Trans</italic> Infection

  • Vinayaka R. Prasad,
  • Michael I. Bukrinsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01396-14
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3

Abstract

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ABSTRACT A small percentage of HIV-infected subjects (2 to 15%) are able to control disease progression for many years without antiretroviral therapy. Years of intense studies of virologic and immunologic mechanisms of disease control in such individuals yielded a number of possible host genes that could be responsible for the preservation of immune functions, from immune surveillance genes, chemokines, or their receptors to anti-HIV restriction factors. A recent mBio paper by Rappocciolo et al. (G. Rappocciolo, M. Jais, P. Piazza, T. A. Reinhart, S. J. Berendam, L. Garcia-Exposito, P. Gupta, and C. R. Rinaldo, mBio 5:e01031-13, 2014) describes another potential factor controlling disease progression: cholesterol levels in antigen-presenting cells. In this commentary, we provide a brief background of the role of cholesterol in HIV infection, discuss the results of the study by Rappocciolo et al., and present the implications of their findings.