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HIV-1 Infection and Glucose Metabolism Reprogramming of T Cells: Another Approach Toward Functional Cure and Reservoir Eradication

Shuang Kang, Hong Tang

2020Frontiers in Immunology49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

With the emerging of highly active antiretroviral therapy, HIV-1 infection has transferred from a fatal threat to a chronic disease that could be managed. Nevertheless, inextricable systemic immune activation and chronic inflammation despite viral suppression render patients still at higher risk of HIV-1-associated non-AIDS complications. Immunometabolism has nowadays raised more and more attention for that targeting metabolism may become a promising approach to modulate immune system and play a role in treating cancer, HIV-1 infection and autoimmune diseases. HIV-1 mainly infects CD4+ T cells and accumulating evidence has brought to light the association between T cell metabolism reprogramming and HIV-1 pathogenesis. Here, we will focus on the interplay of glycometabolism reprogramming of T cells and HIV-1 infection, making an effort to delineate the possibility of utilizing immunometabolism as a new target towards HIV-1 management and even sterilizing cure through eliminating viral reservoir.

Topics & Concepts

ReprogrammingImmune systemImmunologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)InflammationMedicinePathogenesisChronic infectionAntiretroviral therapyDiseaseViral loadBiologyCellInternal medicineGeneticsHIV Research and TreatmentImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmune cells in cancer