personal perspective: an hiv-positive family

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ERROL ARCHIBOLD SANJUKTA HOTA ALEXANDRINE RANDRIAMAHEFA RAFAEL TOSADO ARLIN TORO Understanding HIV-AIDS om a Bio-Math Perspecti

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Page 1: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

ERROL ARCHIBOLD

SANJUKTA HOTA

ALEXANDRINE RANDRIAMAHEFA

RAFAEL TOSADO

ARLIN TORO

Understanding HIV-AIDS from a Bio-Math Perspective

Page 2: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDFiAfJC848

Page 3: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Introduction

• This module uses an inquiry-based approach using video, mathematical modeling, world mapping, and bioinformatics to follow the progression and understanding of HIV-AIDS.

• The problem is designed for undergraduate students in the life sciences and mathematics.

• Using global health cases, visualization data, and mathematical models, students working collaboratively will share what they know about HIV-AIDS.

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• A mathematical model will enable them to compute the intensity of the HIV-AIDS epidemic, calculate the half-life of disease progression, and measure the effects of interventions.

• Based on Markham data (as referenced by Sam Donovan), students will be able to design questions to correlate, classify, and compare CD4 counts and various HIV clones as well as build phylogenetic trees.

Introduction (cont.)

Page 5: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

What we need to know?Potential students questions

Page 6: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

HIV through maps

ucatlas.ucsc.edu

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http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/04.whostat2005map_hivprevalence.jpg

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This map summarizes the global distribution of HIV-1 strains in 2003

www.pbs.org/.../frontline/aids/atlas/clade.html

Page 10: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Deaths due to HIV/AIDS in 2002

http://www.worldmapper.org/display_extra.php?selected=374#

Page 11: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

http://www.worldmapper.org/posters/worldmapper_map227_ver5.pdf

Page 12: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

http://www.worldmapper.org/posters/worldmapper_map226_ver5.pdf

Page 13: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

http://www.worldmapper.org/posters/worldmapper_map225_ver5.pdf

Page 14: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Deaths by STDs Excluding HIV

a Syphilis, Map 375, (87% of deaths).b Chlamydia, Map 376, (5% of deaths).c Gonorrhoea, Map 377, (1% of deaths).d Other STDs, no map, (7% of deaths).

http://www.worldmapper.org/display_extra.php?selected=375

Page 15: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Module Activities

Page 16: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Sequence Data Set

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Data Analysis

Mathematical Modeling

Page 18: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Sequence analysis

Page 19: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

General Information on HIV Biology

Page 20: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

HIV Infection and AIDS

• An often asymptomatic infection caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).

• AIDS is the advanced state of the disease characterized by a series of opportunistic infections occurring due to an immunosupressed state.

Page 21: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

AIDS Definition (CDC)• HIV+ and a CD4 count of 200/mm3 or less*• At least one out of 26 defined opportunistic infections such as:

– Pneumocystic carinii pneumonia (PCP)– Kaposi’s Sarcoma– Systemic Candidiasis

* For people 13 year of age or older

Page 22: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

HIV Transmission

• Sexual transmission– Through the mucosal membranes: vagina, vulva, urethra,

rectum and mouth.

• Blood or blood products– Diminished risk by blood transfusions.

• Syringes– Intravenous drug users.

• Vertical transmission from mother to child– Depends on the delivery method.

Page 23: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

HIV is not transmitted through…

• casual contact• shearing silverware,

towels or clothing.• saliva• sweat• tears

• swiming pools

• telephones• toilets• door knobs• insect bites

Page 24: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

• T-helper Lymphocytes (CD4 cells) are essential for the proper function of the immune system helping in antibody production against infectious agents.

• The HIV virus targets CD4 lymphocytes destroying them as the newly made viruses exit the cell.

• As the amount of virus (viral load) increases in a subject, the number of viable CD4 cells (CD4 count) decreases.

The HIV virus infects and destroys CD4 cells

Page 25: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family
Page 26: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family
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HIV infection depends on the recognition of surface molecules on the CD4 cell.

• The first step in HIV infection is the binding of the CD4 molecule in the lymphocyte surface with the viral receptor protein GP120.

• The HIV-CD4 complex then binds the CCR5 molecule that serves as a co-receptor for HIV infection.

•The viral GP120 binds to the co-receptor through a specific protein domain known as the V3 loop.

•Differences in the viral DNA gene sequence encoding the V3 loop may affect viral recognition of the target cell.

• Differences in the viral DNA sequence accounts for different strains of the HIV virus. An infected individual often has several viral strains.

Page 28: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Resources

• Gap minder – http://www.gapminder.org/videos/ted-talk-2009-

hans-rosling-hiv-facts/• Information related to HIV statistics around the world

• World mapper – http://www.worldmapper.org/

• NCBI– http://www.nlm.nih.gov

Page 29: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Resources

• Clustal W shape/motif/• ConSurf http://consurf.tau.ac.il/• CD4/gp120 3D-model prediction• Work Bench http://seqtool.sdsc.edu/• NCBI BLAST http://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov• Mathematica http://wolfram.com.

Page 30: Personal perspective: an HIV-positive family

Resources

• Markham RB, Wang WC, Weisstein AE, Wang Z, Munoz A, Templeton A, Margolick J, Vlahov D, Quinn T, Farzadegan H, Yu X-F. 1998. Patterns of HIV-1 evolution in individuals with differing rates of CD4 T cell decline. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95: 12568-12573. The original paper presenting and analyzing the data on which this problem space is based.

• Burks J, Ward L, Hota S, Gunasekaran G. Mathematical Modeling of HIV/AIDS Epidemic; In Press for publication in NCUR Proceedings

• AVERT: AVERTing HIV and AIDS: http://www.avert.org

• Kuby Immunology, 6th Ed. 2007 W.H. Freeman and Co.

• National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases:http://www.niaid.nih.gov/DAIDs/dtpdb/graphics/cellbin.gif