The Players
The
Virus. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) causes a weakness
of the immune system. When it infects the body, it prefers to attack certain
cells of our defense system. These cells are called helper T cells which
are a fundamental part of our immune system. HIV almost fully specializes
on these white blood cells since these helper T cells have CD4 molecules
on the surface to which HIV binds.
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Host Cell
HIV, to put it simply, consists of genetic information on the inside and
a protective outer shell of proteins and glycoproteins. Since viruses
use the host cell's resources for reproduction, they don't need to contribute
much themselves. That's why they are much smaller than the host cells,
e.g. helper T cells. In the host cell's nucleus, displayed in blue here,
there are more than 100,000 times as much genetic information stored than
under the protein shell of HIV. However, there is no way for the host
cell to stop the virus once the cell has been infected.
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What
Happens
T-cell
Infection
The infection proceeds in this manner: The virus anchors itself to a special
protein (CD4) on the surface of the helper T cell. This causes the viral
membrane to fuse with the host cell's membrane. This way the genetic information
gets inside the cell.
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Retroviruses
HIV belongs to a special group of viruses, called "retroviruses." Its genetic
information is not encoded as DNA, but instead as RNA (ribonucleic acid)
and therefore has to be reverse transcripted into DNA. The tools for this
are delivered by the host cell itself, except for a little helper protein
(reverse transcriptase) which the virus has brought with itself. The DNA
is now legible for the cell and is transferred to the nucleus. This process
is already finished by a half of a day after infection. The foreign piece
of DNA is then inserted randomly into the host DNA and it is now ready to
be transcribed.
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Break-apart
At the beginning of AIDS, the viral DNA is being transcribed to form many
RNA molecules--the signal which causes this is yet unknown. The accruing
RNA is carried to the cytoplasm of the cell, where it can start making
proteins.
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Replication
The RNA, with the help of the host's resources, begins to make many copies
of the different parts of HIV (the protective shell and the helper and
anchor proteins).
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After everything has been copied, thousands of bubbles like these are
produced and migrate to the cell membrane surface and fuse with it.
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Release
Finally, a copy of the RNA genetic information is added to the bubble.
Then this section of the cell membrane turns inside out and new viruses
leave the cell.
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The Result
Cell Death Naturally, the release of the new virus particles
significantly weakens the host cell which soon dies. Thats how the immune
system weakens. |