| Literature DB >> 26055104 |
Paul J Peters1, Maria Paz Gonzalez-Perez2, Thomas Musich3, Tiffany A Moore Simas4, Rongheng Lin5, Abraham N Morse6, Robin J Shattock7, Cynthia A Derdeyn8, Paul R Clapham9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV-1 variants carrying non-macrophage-tropic HIV-1 R5 envelopes (Envs) are predominantly transmitted and persist in immune tissue even in AIDS patients who have highly macrophage-tropic variants in the brain. Non-macrophage-tropic R5 Envs require high levels of CD4 for infection contrasting with macrophage-tropic Envs, which can efficiently mediate infection of cells via low CD4. Here, we investigated whether non-macrophage-tropic R5 Envs from the acute stage of infection (including transmitted/founder Env) mediated more efficient infection of ectocervical explant cultures compared to non-macrophage-tropic and highly macrophage-tropic R5 Envs from late disease.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26055104 PMCID: PMC4459458 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-015-0176-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
HIV-1 env clones used to prepare GFP reporter Env+ pseudovirions
|
| Clade | Full name | Origin | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transmitted/founder (T/F) | ||||
| 3T | B | p1054.TC4.1499 | Plasma | [ |
| 6T | B | p63358.p3.4013 | Plasma | [ |
| 15T | B | p700010040.C9.4520 | Plasma | [ |
| 19T | B | pPRB958_06.TB1.4305 | Plasma | [ |
| R463F | A1 | R463FPL16MAR07EnvE44 | Plasma | [ |
| R880F | A1 | R880FPL12JAN07EnvA6 | Plasma | [ |
| R66M | A/C | R66MPL7MAR06.3A9Env | Plasma | Unpublished |
| Z1792M | C | Z1792MPL18DEC07.3G7Env2 | Plasma | Unpublished |
| Acute stage | ||||
| Z185F | C | Z185FPB24AUG02ENV3.1 | Blood | [ |
| Z205F | C | Z205FPB27MAR03ENV1.1 | Blood | [ |
| Z201M | C | Z201MPL7FEB03ENV2.1 | Plasma | [ |
| Z221M | C | Z221MPL7MAR03ENV2.1 | Plasma | [ |
| Z153M | C | Z153MPL13MAR02ENV5.1 | Plasma | [ |
| Macrophage tropic | ||||
| BaL | B | BaL.26 | Lung | [ |
| JRFL | B | Brain | [ | |
| NA20 B59 | B | Brain | [ | |
| NA420 B33 | B | Brain | [ | |
| 7766 FL2 | B | 7766 FL19-56-66 | Brain | [ |
| 10017 FL1 | B | 10017 FL9-1-2 | Brain | [ |
| 6568 FL1 | B | 6568 FL11-1-249 | Brain | [ |
| CA110 OC1 | B | CA110 OC58-11-57 | Brain | [ |
| CA110 SP1 | B | CA110 SP52-13-34 | Spleen | [ |
| E21 B37-6 | B | Brain | [ | |
| E21 B100-1 | B | Brain | [ | |
| Non-macrophage tropic | ||||
| JRCSF | B | CSF | [ | |
| NA20 LN8 | B | Lymph Node | [ | |
| NA420 LN40 | B | NA420 LN40/B33 | Lymph Node | [ |
| 7766 SP1 | B | 7766 SP13-33-41 | Spleen | [ |
| 10017 SP2 | B | 10017 SP10-9-65 | Spleen | [ |
| 6568 SP1 | B | 6568 SP6-11-9 | Spleen | [ |
| CA110 SP2 | B | CA110 SP53-23-131 | Spleen | [ |
| CA110 SP3 | B | CA110 SP53-6-122 | Spleen | [ |
| E21 LN58-3 | B | Lymph Node | [ | |
| KM21 BL1-45 | G | Blood | [ | |
| KM21 S1-20 | G | Semen | [ | |
Figure 1Macrophage infectivity for Envs selected for cervical explant studies. a Infectivity for macrophages (FFU/mL) for Env+ pseudoviruses (left panel). Mac-tropic Envs mediated significantly higher levels of macrophage infectivity compared to T/F/acute and late stage non-mac-tropic Envs (p values = <0.0001) right panel. b Macrophage infection plotted as a percent of TZM-bl infectivity (left panel). Correction of Env+ pseudovirus infectivity for different levels of infectivity on TZM-bl cells confirms that mac-tropic Envs mediated significantly higher levels of macrophage infectivity compared to T/F/acute and late stage non-mac-tropic Envs (p values = <0.0001) right panel. Left panel in a and b show means and standard errors from infectivities measured on macrophages derived from at least three donors, right panels show geometric means with 95% confidence intervals. p values were calculated using unpaired, two-tailed t tests in Prism 6.0f.
Figure 2GFP reporter virus infection of ectocervical tissue explants. a Infected GFP+ cells in explant cultures. Infected, GFP+ cells are readily observed and easily distinguished from low-level auto-fluorescence of the tissue. Note some are GFP+ infected emigrant cells. b BaL and NA420 LN40 infection of explants without stimulation or in the presence of PHA/IL-2, GM-CSF, or GM-CSF and IL-4. Data are averaged from 2 or 3 replicate explants. c BaL and NA420 LN40 infection was efficiently inhibited following maraviroc blockade of CCR5 and by the post-entry, NNRTI inhibitor, nevirapine. Data are averaged from at least two donors with five replicate explants per donor.
Figure 3Ectocervical explant infectivity. a Ectocervical explant infection (FFU/mL) is shown for all Env+ pseudoviruses (left panel). No significant differences were detected between late disease mac-tropic, late-disease non-mac-tropic or T/F/acute Env+ pseudoviruses using unpaired, two-tailed t tests (right panel). b Infectivity for ectocervical explants plotted as a percent of HeLa TZM-bl infectivity. Using this correction, many T/F/acute and late disease non-mac-tropic Envs mediated higher infectivity (per TZM-bl IUs) compared to mac-tropic Envs (left panel). Ectocervical explant infectivity for late-disease non-mac-tropic and T/F/acute Env+ pseudoviruses was significantly higher than late-disease mac-tropic Envs (right panel). Each Env+ pseudovirus was tested on explants prepared from at least five donors with five replicate explants per donor.
Figure 4T-cells are the major cell type infected in ectocervical explants. Cells extracted from PHA/IL-2 stimulated, infected explant cultures were subjected to positive selection of T-cells (a) or negative selection for monocytes and macrophages (b) using StemCell Technologies EasySep immunomagnetic kits. Infected GFP+ cells consistently segregated with T-cells and not monocyte/macrophages. In other experiments, BaL infected explants were stimulated with GM-CSF and cultured in human AB+ plasma to support monocyte/macrophages. Extracted cells then underwent T-cell positive selection (c) or monocyte/macrophage negative selection (d). Again, GFP+ cells segregated with T-cells and not monocyte/macrophages.