Lecture 6: HIV Flashcards
What kind of cells does HIV invade?
CD4 T helper cells
Dendritic cells
Monocytes
When does a person have AIDS?
CD4 count < 200 cells/mL
OR
Presence of any AIDS defining condition
What is the origin virus of HIV?
SIV (Simian)
Where did HIV originate?
Kinshasa (Northernish africa)
Where did HIV first hit the US?
NYC 1970s
When was AIDS defined?
1981/1982.
What was the first US case of AIDS?
Female partner of a known HIV infected in 1983.
When was HIV actually discovered?
1984
AKA it came after AIDS was defined.
When did we start having HIV blood tests?
1985, a year after HIV was identified and 4 years after AIDS was identified.
When did HIV start declining?
1995, as we developed an oral HIV test.
Where was AIDS the leading cause of death in 1999?
Africa.
4th in the World.
When did generic HIV drugs start rolling out?
2001
When was PrEP made?
2012
When did blood donation rules finally change in regards to HIV?
2015
Where in the US is HIV most prevalent?
The south
Who does the WHO define as the greatest populations at risk for HIV?
Men who have sex with men
Transgender
IVDU
Sex workers
Heterosexuals
Healthcare workers (needlestick transmission is 3 in 1000)
What is HIV’s mode of transmission?
Blood
Semen
Pre-seminal fluid
Rectal fluid
Vaginal fluid
Breast milk
Contact with mucous membranes/damaged tissue
Direct injection
What is the most common entryway for HIV transmission?
Anogenital mucosa
second is receptive anal intercourse.
How is HIV NOT transmitted?
Saliva
Sweat
Tears
Vomit
Urine
Nasal secretions
What is the rarest HIV transmission rate?
Blood transfusions in the US. 1 in 1million.
What is the highest HIV transmission rate?
Mother to child. 13-40%
How does HIV work? (7)
- Fuses to host cell
- Forces entry, injecting HIV RNA, reverse transcriptase, integrase, and viral proteins.
- Viral DNA is made by reverse transcriptase.
- Viral DNA transports across the cell nucleus to integrate with the Host DNA.
- New Viral RNA is made as part of the cell’s genomic RNA.
- New viral RNA and proteins move to cell surface, forming an immature HIV.
- Virus is released and protease cleaves to create a new mature virus.
What exactly does HIV interact with on a cell surface?
gp120 on virion envelope + T-cell coreceptor (CXCR4) via a CCR5 co-receptor
What is transinfection?
A dendritic cell with HIV bound to it transfers it to CD4 T cells.