7 research outputs found
HIV Reservoirs and Immune Surveillance Evasion Cause the Failure of Structured Treatment Interruptions: A Computational Study
Continuous antiretroviral therapy is currently the most effective way to treat HIV infection. Unstructured interruptions are quite common due to side effects and toxicity, among others, and cannot be prevented. Several attempts to structure these interruptions failed due to an increased morbidity compared to continuous treatment. The cause of this failure is poorly understood and often attributed to drug resistance. Here we show that structured treatment interruptions would fail regardless of the emergence of drug resistance. Our computational model of the HIV infection dynamics in lymphoid tissue inside lymph nodes, demonstrates that HIV reservoirs and evasion from immune surveillance themselves are sufficient to cause the failure of structured interruptions. We validate our model with data from a clinical trial and show that it is possible to optimize the schedule of interruptions to perform as well as the continuous treatment in the absence of drug resistance. Our methodology enables studying the problem of treatment optimization without having impact on human beings. We anticipate that it is feasible to steer new clinical trials using computational models
Four whole-istic aspects of schistosome granuloma biology: fractal arrangement, internal regulation, autopoietic component and closure
This paper centers on some whole-istic organizational and functional aspects of hepatic Schistosoma mansoni granuloma, which is an extremely complex system. First, it structurally develops a collagenic topology, originated bidirectionally from an inward and outward assembly of growth units. Inward growth appears to be originated from myofibroblasts derived from small portal vessel around intravascular entrapped eggs, while outward growth arises from hepatic stellate cells. The auto-assembly of the growth units defines the three-dimensional scaffold of the schistosome granulomas. The granuloma surface irregularity and its border presented fractal dimension equal to 1.58. Second, it is internally regulated by intricate networks of immuneneuroendocrine stimuli orchestrated by leptin and leptin receptors, substance P and Vasoactive intestinal peptide. Third, it can reach the population of ± 40,000 cells and presents an autopoietic component evidenced by internal proliferation (Ki-67+ Cells), and by expression of c-Kit+ Cells, leptin and leptin receptor (Ob-R), granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF-R), and erythropoietin (Epo-R) receptors. Fourth, the granulomas cells are intimately connected by pan-cadherins, occludin and connexin-43, building a state of closing (granuloma closure). In conclusion, the granuloma is characterized by transitory stages in such a way that its organized structure emerges as a global property which is greater than the sum of actions of its individual cells and extracellular matrix components
Four whole-istic aspects of schistosome granuloma biology: fractal arrangement, internal regulation, autopoietic component and closure
This paper centers on some whole-istic organizational and functional
aspects of hepatic Schistosoma mansoni granuloma, which is an
extremely complex system. First, it structurally develops a collagenic
topology, originated bidirectionally from an inward and outward
assembly of growth units. Inward growth appears to be originated from
myofibroblasts derived from small portal vessel around intravascular
entrapped eggs, while outward growth arises from hepatic stellate
cells. The auto-assembly of the growth units defines the
three-dimensional scaffold of the schistosome granulomas. The granuloma
surface irregularity and its border presented fractal dimension equal
to 1.58. Second, it is internally regulated by intricate networks of
immuneneuroendocrine stimuli orchestrated by leptin and leptin
receptors, substance P and Vasoactive intestinal peptide. Third, it can
reach the population of ± 40,000 cells and presents an autopoietic
component evidenced by internal proliferation (Ki-67+cells), and by
expression of c-Kit+cells, leptin and leptin receptor (Ob-R),
granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF-R), and erythropoietin
(Epo-R) receptors. Fourth, the granulomas cells are intimately
connected by pan-cadherins, occludin and connexin-43, building a state
of closing (granuloma closure). In conclusion, the granuloma is
characterized by transitory stages in such a way that its organized
structure emerges as a global property which is greater than the sum of
actions of its individual cells and extracellular matrix components