Eh. Eylar et al., PROLIFERATIVE RESPONSE OF CD4(-CELL SUBSETS FROM HISPANICS WITH HIV+ AND AIDS - THE SUPERANTIGEN HYPOTHESIS() AND CD8(+) T), Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes, 7(2), 1994, pp. 124-128
It has been hypothesized that the progressive deletion of CD4(+) T cel
ls in the course of infection due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV
) may be mediated in part by interaction with a superantigen inherent
in an HIV protein. Consequently, selective loss of CD4(+) cells with a
T cell receptor V beta-chain capable of interaction with superantigen
would produce a CD4(+) population less or totally unresponsive to sup
erantigen such as staphylococcal enterotoxins B and A (SEB and SEA res
pectively), but not to other mitogens such as concanavalin A, anti-CD3
(OKT3), or pokeweed mitogen. We tested this hypothesis by comparing t
he proliferative response of SEB and SEA with the other mitogens for 2
5 controls, 20 HIV+, and 15 donors with acquired immune deficiency syn
drome (AIDS). We found that peripheral blood mononuclear cells, as wel
l as the CD4(+) and CD8(+) subsets from bath HIV+ and AIDS sources, th
e degree of suppression of mitogenesis for SEB and SEA was approximate
ly equal to or less than that of the other mitogens. Moreover, suppres
sion of HIV+ CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses to SEB and SEA was equ
al (26%). If HIV superantigens exist, our data suggest that they are n
ot responsible for the selective depletion of the CD4(+) T cell subset
as evaluated by SEB and SEA specificity.