CD4+ T细胞促进原代HIV-1毒株在巨噬细胞中的复制和巨噬细胞内部含病毒室的形成。

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 VIROLOGY
Sabina Victoria, Johanna Leyens, Lea Marie Meckes, Georgios Vavouras Syrigos, Gabriela Turk, Michael Schindler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

HIV-1在巨噬细胞中的复制是高度可变的,内部病毒积聚在所谓的含病毒室(vcc)中。vcc代表了一个免受抗病毒免疫反应屏蔽的储存库。在实验室适应的HIV-1中研究了VCC的形成,但尚未研究原代HIV-1菌株是否诱导VCC。此外,尽管巨噬细胞将HIV-1从vcc传播到CD4+ T细胞,但T细胞对vcc的影响尚不清楚。我们分析了原代和实验室适应的HIV-1在巨噬细胞中的复制能力、非感染CD4+ T细胞共培养的影响以及VCC的形成。所有HIV-1毒株在CD4+ T细胞中复制,而只有实验室适应的HIV-1毒株在单核巨噬细胞中有效复制。与未感染的CD4+ T细胞共培养增强了巨噬细胞中原代HIV-1的复制,这一过程与VCC形成增加相关,依赖于细胞间的直接接触。广泛中和抗体差异影响CD4+ T细胞介导的巨噬细胞中HIV-1复制的增强。CD4抗体对巨噬细胞的处理可表型化CD4+ T细胞共培养的促感染作用。总之,未感染的CD4+ T细胞促进了巨噬细胞中HIV-1的初级复制,而vcc的诱导似乎是这种表型的代理。非感染的CD4+ T细胞以CD4和gp120依赖的方式促进巨噬细胞中VCC的形成和HIV-1的复制。我们的研究结果强调了T细胞-巨噬细胞相互作用在HIV-1复制动力学和VCC形成中的关键作用,并呼吁采取干预VCC的策略,以靶向巨噬细胞中的HIV-1储存库。在这里,我们专注于hiv -1感染的巨噬细胞和CD4+ T细胞之间的密切相互作用。具体来说,我们分析了原代HIV-1毒株是否诱导巨噬细胞内的含病毒室(VCCs),这被认为是病毒避难所和巨噬细胞储存库。值得注意的是,原代HIV-1毒株不能在巨噬细胞中复制并诱导VCC,除非它们与未感染的CD4+ T细胞共培养,从而增强VCC的形成和病毒复制。这表明非感染的CD4+ T细胞在促进巨噬细胞中HIV-1的初级复制中起着重要作用。我们的数据强调了不仅要解决潜伏的HIV-1 T细胞库,而且要靶向巨噬细胞中VCC的形成,以实现功能性HIV-1治愈的最终目标的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
CD4+ T cells facilitate replication of primary HIV-1 strains in macrophages and formation of macrophage internal virus-containing compartments.

HIV-1 replication in macrophages is highly variable with internal virus accumulation in so-called virus-containing compartments (VCCs). VCCs represent a reservoir that is shielded from the antiviral immune response. VCC formation has been studied in lab-adapted HIV-1, but it has not been investigated whether primary HIV-1 strains induce VCCs. Furthermore, although macrophages transmit HIV-1 from VCCs to CD4+ T cells, the effect of T cells on VCCs is unknown. We analyzed the ability of primary and lab-adapted HIV-1 to replicate in macrophages, the effect of non-infected CD4+ T cell coculture, and VCC formation. All HIV-1 strains replicated in CD4+ T cells, whereas only lab-adapted HIV-1 replicated efficiently in macrophage monocultures. Coculture with non-infected CD4+ T cells enhanced the replication of primary HIV-1 in macrophages, a process associated with increased VCC formation and dependent on direct cell-to-cell contact. Broadly neutralizing antibodies differentially affected CD4+ T cell-mediated enhancement of HIV-1 replication in macrophages. CD4 antibody treatment of macrophages phenocopied the infection-promoting effect of CD4+ T cell coculture. In conclusion, non-infected CD4+ T cells facilitate primary HIV-1 replication in macrophages, and the induction of VCCs appears to be a proxy for this phenotype. VCC formation and HIV-1 replication in macrophages are promoted by non-infected CD4+ T cells in a CD4- and GP120-dependent manner. Our findings highlight the critical role of T cell-macrophage interaction in HIV-1 replication dynamics and VCC formation and call for strategies to interfere with VCCs in order to target the HIV-1 reservoir in macrophages.IMPORTANCEHere, we focus on the intimate interplay between HIV-1-infected macrophages and CD4+ T cells. Specifically, we analyzed whether primary HIV-1 strains induce virus-containing compartments (VCCs) within macrophages, which are thought to serve as viral sanctuaries and macrophage reservoirs. Notably, primary HIV-1 strains were unable to replicate in macrophages and induce VCCs unless they were cocultured with non-infected CD4+ T cells, leading to enhanced VCC formation and viral replication. This suggests an essential role for non-infected CD4+ T cells in facilitating primary HIV-1 replication in macrophages. Our data highlight the importance of not only addressing the latent HIV-1 T cell reservoir but also targeting VCC formation in macrophages to achieve the ultimate goal of functional HIV-1 cure.

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来源期刊
Journal of Virology
Journal of Virology 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
906
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Virology (JVI) explores the nature of the viruses of animals, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants, and protozoa. We welcome papers on virion structure and assembly, viral genome replication and regulation of gene expression, genetic diversity and evolution, virus-cell interactions, cellular responses to infection, transformation and oncogenesis, gene delivery, viral pathogenesis and immunity, and vaccines and antiviral agents.
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