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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2016

HIV

Case Western Reserve University

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Proteome And Protein Network Analyses Of Memory T Cells Find Altered Translation And Cell Stress Signaling In Treated Human Immunodeficiency Virus Patients Exhibiting Poor Cd4 Recovery, Sausan Azzam, Daniela M. Schlatzer, Sean Maxwell, Xiaolin Li, Douglas Bazdar, Yanwen Chen, Robert Asaad, Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan, Mark R. Chance, Scott F. Sieg Mar 2016

Proteome And Protein Network Analyses Of Memory T Cells Find Altered Translation And Cell Stress Signaling In Treated Human Immunodeficiency Virus Patients Exhibiting Poor Cd4 Recovery, Sausan Azzam, Daniela M. Schlatzer, Sean Maxwell, Xiaolin Li, Douglas Bazdar, Yanwen Chen, Robert Asaad, Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan, Mark R. Chance, Scott F. Sieg

Faculty Scholarship

Background. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) patients who experience poor CD4 T-cell recovery despite viral suppression during antiretroviral therapy (ART) are known as immunological nonresponders. The molecular mechanism(s) underlying incomplete immune restoration during ART is not fully understood. Methods. Label-free quantitative proteomics on single-cell type central memory T cells were used to reveal relative protein abundance changes between nonresponder, responder (good CD4 recovery during ART), and healthy individuals. Proteome changes were analyzed by protein pathway and network analyses and verified by selected reaction monitoring mass spectrometry. Results. Proteomic analysis across groups detected 155 significant proteins from 1500 nonredundant proteins. Pathway and …