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B1 Intermedio Inglés 9:55 Educational

HIV & AIDS - signs, symptoms, transmission, causes & pathology

Osmosis from Elsevier · 4,691,318 vistas · Añadido hace 2 meses

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Subtítulos (130 segmentos)

00:01

HIV, or human immunodeficiency virus, is a virus that targets cells in the immune system.

00:10

Over time, the immune system begins to fail which is called immunodeficiency, and this

00:15

increases the risk of infections and tumors that a healthy immune system would usually

00:19

be able to fend off.

00:21

These complications are referred to as AIDS, or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

00:26

Now there are two distinct types of HIV—HIV-1 and HIV-2.

00:31

HIV-1 is the more commonly associated with AIDS in the US and worldwide, HIV-2 is more

00:37

rare, and typically restricted to areas in western Africa and southern Asia.

00:41

HIV-2 is so uncommon that “HIV” almost always refers to HIV-1.

00:48

Alright HIV targets CD4+ cells, meaning cells that have this specific molecule called CD4

00:54

on their membrane.

00:55

Macrophages, T-helper cells, and dendritic cells are all involved in the immune response

00:59

and all have CD4 molecules; therefore they can be targeted by HIV.

01:04

The CD4 molecule helps these cells attach to and communicate with other immune cells,

01:10

which is particularly important when the cells are launching attacks against foreign pathogens.

01:15

So this little molecule is pretty important for our immune system, but it’s also extremely

01:19

important for HIV.

01:21

HIV targets and attaches to the CD4 molecule via a protein called gp120 found on its envelope.

01:29

HIV then again uses gp120 to attach to another receptor, called a co-receptor.

01:35

HIV needs to bind to both the CD4 molecule and a coreceptor to get inside the cell.

01:41

The most common co-receptors that HIV uses are the CXCR4 co-receptor, which is found

01:47

mainly on T-cells, or the CCR5 co-receptor which is found on T-cells, macrophages, monocytes,

01:54

and dendritic cells.

01:55

These coreceptors are so important that some people with homogeneous genetic mutations

02:01

in their CCR5 actually have resistance or immunity to HIV, since HIV can’t attach

02:08

and get into the cell.

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