| Literature DB >> 30055632 |
Jérémy Dufloo1,2, Timothée Bruel1,2,3, Olivier Schwartz4,5,6.
Abstract
HIV-1 spreads through contacts between infected and target cells. Polarized viral budding at the contact site forms the virological synapse. Additional cellular processes, such as nanotubes, filopodia, virus accumulation in endocytic or phagocytic compartments promote efficient viral propagation. Cell-to-cell transmission allows immune evasion and likely contributes to HIV-1 spread in vivo. Anti-HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) defeat the majority of circulating viral strains by binding to the viral envelope glycoprotein (Env). Several bNAbs have entered clinical evaluation during the last years. It is thus important to understand their mechanism of action and to determine how they interact with infected cells. In experimental models, HIV-1 cell-to-cell transmission is sensitive to neutralization, but the effect of antibodies is often less marked than during cell-free infection. This may be due to differences in the conformation or accessibility of Env at the surface of virions and cells. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on HIV-1 cell-to-cell transmission and discuss the role of bNAbs during this process.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-to-cell transmission; HIV-1; Neutralization; bNAbs
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30055632 PMCID: PMC6064125 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-018-0434-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1Mechanisms of HIV-1 cell-to-cell transmission. a Infected and uninfected T cells come in contact to form a virological synapse. HIV-1 gains access to the cytoplasm of the target cell by direct fusion at the plasma membrane or eventually after endocytosis. This structure is dependent on Env/CD4 interaction, adhesion molecules (LFA-1/ICAM-1) interaction, and the cytoskeleton. b Uninfected macrophages or dendritic cells (DC) store HIV-1 particles in intracellular compartments after capture via DC-SIGN or SIGLEC-1. These particles can be released and transferred to CD4+ T cells through the infectious synapse. c HIV-1 surfs along nanotubes between uninfected and infected T cells. d Macrophages can be infected after phagocytosis of infected CD4+ T cells. e Macrophages can fuse with infected CD4+ T cells and with surrounding uninfected macrophages to form multinucleated giant cells. Donor cells are in brown and uninfected cells in blue
Fig. 2Neutralization potency of bNAbs against cell-free and cell-to-cell transmission of various viral strains. Cell-free (a) and cell-to-cell (b) neutralization IC50s of different bNAbs against several viral strains were compiled from the indicated studies (Malbec et al. [116]; Reh et al. [117], Gombos et al. [118], and Li et al. [119]). IC50s are color-coded with a heat map ranging from 0 (green) to 15 µg/ml and more (red). x not effective, no IC50 could be determined; ND not done; Lab-a lab-adapted
Fig. 3Potential mechanisms explaining the increased resistance of cell-associated HIV-1 to bNAbs-mediated neutralization. a bNAbs may poorly access virions present at the VS because of the physical proximity of donor and target cell membranes. b VS-mediated HIV-1 is associated with high MOIs. c Viruses budding at the VS may incorporate cellular proteins differently than cell-free virions, possibly leading to different susceptibilities to bNAbs. d Env conformation and stability of Env-bNAb complexes at the cell surface. Env conformation may be different at the surface of cell-free virus and at the plasma membrane. The stability of Env-bNAb complexes at the cell surface depends on the antibody and the viral strain. Donor cells are in brown and uninfected cells in blue