Farci et al. (Reports, 14 April, p. 339), studying the evolution of
sequences in the envelope genes of the hepatitis C virus (HCV), found
that
HCV evolved rapidly and showed much more genetic diversity in patients
who
developed the chronic form of the disease than it did in patients who
ultimately cleared the virus. The data, they concluded, "indicate that
the
evolutionary dynamics of the HCV quasispecies during the acute phase
of
hepatitis C predict whether the infection will resolve or become chronic."
Klenerman et al., while acknowledging that reduced viral diversity
indeed
probably constitutes "a feature of more successful immune responses,"
argue
that "an appropriate balance between cellular and humoral immune responses"
--i.e., between the early response by CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes
(CTLs)
and subsequent pressure from neutralizing antibodies--is another important,
and often overlooked, element of immune system success against this
virus.
Farci et al., in their response, agree that "the cellular and humoral
components of the immune system together induce definitive viral
clearance," in marked contrast to "the reductionist theories of either
CTL
dominance or antibody dominance that have hitherto prevailed in studies
of
sterilizing immunity."