| Literature DB >> 34973144 |
K Kallmeyer1,2, M A Ryder1,2, M S Pepper3,4.
Abstract
The introduction of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has transformed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 into a chronic, well-managed disease. However, these therapies do not eliminate all infected cells from the body despite suppressing viral load. Viral rebound is largely due to the presence of cellular reservoirs which support long-term persistence of HIV-1. A thorough understanding of the HIV-1 reservoir will facilitate the development of new strategies leading to its detection, reduction, and elimination, ultimately leading to curative therapies for HIV-1. Although immune cells derived from lymphoid and myeloid progenitors have been thoroughly studied as HIV-1 reservoirs, few studies have examined whether mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) can assume this function. In this review, we evaluate published studies which have assessed whether MSCs contribute to the HIV-1 reservoir. MSCs have been found to express the receptors and co-receptors required for HIV-1 entry, albeit at levels of expression and receptor localisation that vary considerably between studies. Exposure to HIV-1 and HIV-1 proteins alters MSC properties in vitro, including their proliferation capacity and differentiation potential. However, in vitro and in vivo experiments investigating whether MSCs can become infected with and harbour latent integrated proviral DNA are lacking. In conclusion, MSCs appear to have the potential to contribute to the HIV-1 reservoir. However, further studies are needed using techniques such as those used to prove that cluster of differentiation (CD)4+ T cells constitute an HIV-1 reservoir before a reservoir function can definitively be ascribed to MSCs. MSCs may contribute to HIV-1 persistence in vivo in the vasculature, adipose tissue, and bone marrow by being a reservoir for latent HIV-1. To harbour latent HIV-1, MSCs must express HIV-1 entry markers, and show evidence of productive or latent HIV-1 infection. The effect of HIV-1 or HIV-1 proteins on MSC properties may also be indicative of HIV-1 infection.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1 latency; HIV-1 proteins; Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1; cellular reservoirs; infection; mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs); receptors/co-receptors; stem cells; viral rebound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34973144 PMCID: PMC9033703 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-021-10298-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Rev Rep ISSN: 2629-3277 Impact factor: 6.692
Fig. 1HIV-1 life cycle and latency. To enter host cells, the HIV-1 gp120 Env protein binds to the host CD4 receptor and CCR5/CXCR4 co-receptors (1). Once bound, the HIV-1 viral envelope fuses with the host membrane and uncoats, releasing HIV-1 proteins and ssRNA into the host cell cytoplasm (2-3). HIV-1 ssRNA is reverse-transcribed into the dsDNA proviral genome using HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (4) and can integrate into the dsDNA host genome in the nucleus (5). Host genomic DNA containing the integrated HIV-1 transcript can then undergo transcription, RNA processing and translation to produce viral proteins, which assemble with viral ssRNA to form mature, infectious HIV-1 virions (6-8). Alternatively, interference with gene expression through mechanisms such as epigenetic silencing and/or post-translational modifications, can cause the replication-competent provirus to remain latent within the host cell. Certain chemical compounds, termed latency reversal agents, can reverse silencing mechanisms to reactivate latent HIV-1. Abbreviations: CCR5: C-C-motif chemokine receptor type 5; CD4: cluster of differentiation type 4; CXCR4: C-X-C-motif chemokine receptor type 4; dsDNA: double stranded DNA; Env: HIV-1 envelope protein; Gag: HIV-1 group specific antigen; gp120: HIV-1 glycoprotein 120; LTR: long terminal repeat; mRNA: messenger ribonucleic acid; Nef: HIV-1 negative factor protein; Pol: HIV-1 polymerase; Rev: HIV-1 response element protein; ssRNA: single-stranded RNA; Tat: HIV-1 transactivating protein; Vif: HIV-1 viral infectivity factor protein; Vpr: HIV-1 viral protein R; Vpu: HIV-1 viral protein U
Studies detecting HIV-1 infection and latency in CD4+ T cells and MSCs
| Technique | Purpose | Target | Technique used on activated cells*? | Relevant studies using CD4+ T cells to establish techniques | Relevant studies using MSCs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCR | Presence of viral DNA in cells exposed to HIV-1 | HIV-1 specific DNA such as | No | BM-MSCs: [ Vessel wall-derived MSCs: [ Adipose cells/preadipocytes: [ BM-derived stromal cells: [ | |
| qPCR | Genomic integration of HIV-1 into the host genome | Conserved genomic regions of HIV-1 DNA, including | No | [ | ASCs: [ |
| ddPCR | Conserved genomic regions of HIV-1 DNA, including | No | [ | ||
| Nested qPCR | No | [ | Vessel wall-derived MSCs: [ BM-MSCs: [ | ||
| Q4PCR | HIV-1 packaging signal, | No | [ | ||
| ELISA (conventional and digital) | Productive infection | p24 | No | [ | BM-MSCs: [ Vessel wall-derived MSCs: [ ASCs: [ Adipose cells/preadipocytes: [ BM-derived stromal cells: [ |
| TILDA | Yes or no | [ | |||
| Latent infection | |||||
| FLIPS | Full-length HIV-1 genomic DNA | No | [ | ||
| qVOA and ELISA | p24 | Yes | [ |
*Activated with latency reversal agents, such as PHA and PMA
Abbreviations: ASCs Adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, (BM)-MSCs (Bone marrow-derived) mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, ddPCR digital droplet polymerase chain reaction, DNA deoxyribonucleic acid, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, env HIV-1 envelope protein, FLIPS full-length individual proviral sequencing, gag HIV-1 group specific antigen, LTR long terminal repeat, MSCs mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, PHA phytohaemagglutinin A, PMA phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, pol HIV-1 polymerase, PCR polymerase chain reaction, qPCR quantitative PCR, Q4PCR combined quadruplex qPCR, qVOA quantitative viral outgrowth assay, rev HIV-1 response element protein, RNA ribonucleic acid, tat HIV-1 transactivating protein, TILDA Tat/rev induced limiting dilution assay
HIV-1 receptor and co-receptor expression in cultured human MSCs
| MSC source | Receptor/co- receptor | Technique | Outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intracellular | Extracellular | ||||
| BM-MSCs | CD4 | RT-qPCR | Immunocytochemistry on HIV-1 exposed/unexposed cells | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression, which increased with HIV-1 exposure. | [ |
| PCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Failure to detect cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| CCR5 | Immunocytochemistry | Low expression on cell surface. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Flow cytometry | Failure to detect mRNA and cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| RT-qPCR | Immunocytochemistry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| Immunocytochemistry | Failure to detect cell surface expression. | [ | |||
| Immunocytochemistry | High expression in cells. | [ | |||
| Flow cytometry | Cell surface expression on approximately 78% of cells. | [ | |||
| CXCR4 | RT-PCR | Flow cytometry | Failure to detect mRNA. Cell surface expression on 1% of cells. Intracellular expression in 83-98% of cells. | [ | |
| RT-PCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression on approximately 26% of cells. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression on 43% of cells. | [ | ||
| RT-qPCR | Immunocytochemistry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| Immunocytochemistry | Cell surface expression. | [ | |||
| RT-qPCR | Flow cytometry on 100 ng/mL gp120 treated/untreated cells | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression on 84% of cells. Treatment with gp120 upregulated surface expression by 2-3-fold. | [ | ||
| RT-qPCR | Flow cytometry | Low levels of mRNA. Cell surface expression on approximately 2% of cells. | [ | ||
| RT-qPCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression on approximately 29.8% of cells. | [ | ||
| RT-qPCR and flow cytometry | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Intracellular expression in 95.9% of cells. Cell surface expression on 0.1% of cells. | [ | ||
| Flow cytometry | Cell surface expression on approximately 96% of cells. | [ | |||
| Preadipocytes (may contain a subset of ASCs) | CD4 | RT-PCR | Detection of mRNA. | [ | |
| RT-PCR | Immunocytochemistry | Detection of mRNA. Failure to detect cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Failure to detect mRNA. | [ | |||
| CCR5 | RT-PCR | Low levels of mRNA. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Immunocytochemistry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Failure to detect mRNA. | [ | |||
| CXCR4 | RT-PCR | High levels of mRNA. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Immunocytochemistry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression. | [ | ||
| RT-PCR | Detection of mRNA. | [ | |||
| ASCs | CCR5 | Flow cytometry | Negligible cell surface expression. | [ | |
| CXCR4 | Flow cytometry | Cell surface expression on approximately 1.21% of cells. | [ | ||
| Dermal MSCs | CCR5 | Flow cytometry | Negligible cell surface expression. | [ | |
| CXCR4 | Flow cytometry | Cell surface expression on approximately 1.31% of cells. | [ | ||
| Vessel wall-derived MSCs | CD4 | RT-qPCR and flow cytometry | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Intracellular expression in 20% of cells. Failure to detect cell surface expression. | [ |
| CCR5 | RT-qPCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. High levels of expression on cell surface. | ||
| CXCR4 | RT-qPCR | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. High levels of expression on cell surface. | ||
| Fetal blood MSCs | CXCR4 | RT-PCR and flow cytometry | Flow cytometry | Detection of mRNA. Cell surface expression on 23-25% of cells. Intracellular expression in 78-83% of cells. | [ |
| Fetal BM-MSCs | CXCR4 | RT-qPCR and flow cytometry | Flow cytometry | Low levels of mRNA. Cell surface expression on 3.8% of cells. Intracellular expression in 50-90% of cells. | [ |
Abbreviations: ASCs adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, (BM)-MSCs (Bone marrow-derived) mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, CCR5 C-C-motif chemokine receptor type 5, CD4 cluster of differentiation type 4, CXCR4 C-X-C-motif chemokine receptor type 4, gp120 HIV-1 glycoprotein 120, mRNA messenger ribonucleic acid, MSCs mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, PCR polymerase chain reaction, RT-PCR reverse transcription PCR, RT-qPCR reverse transcription quantitative PCR, qPCR quantitative PCR
MSC characteristics affected by HIV-1 infection and/or exposure to HIV-1 proteins in vitro
| MSC source | Treatment | Characteristic | Outcome | Proposed mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vessel wall-derived MSCs | HIV-1 strains: HIV-1IIIb HIV-1ada HIV-1 gp120 protein | Apoptosis | Induced apoptosis in sub-confluent MSCs but failed to induce apoptosis during differentiation. | Direct interaction of gp120 and CD4 with the cell membrane led to apoptosis. Blocking gp120 or CD4 reversed the activation of apoptosis. | [ |
| Adipogenic differentiation | Enhanced adipogenesis. | Upregulates expression of | |||
| Endothelial cell differentiation | Inhibited endothelial differentiation. | Downregulates expression of endothelial markers vWF, Flt-1 and KDR (as detected by flow cytometry and RT-qPCR). | |||
| Vessel wall-derived MSCs | HIV-1 Tat protein | Apoptosis | Induced apoptosis in sub-confluent MSCs with high Tat concentration but failed to induce apoptosis during differentiation. | Tat modulates cell proliferation and survival by inducing pro-apoptotic or anti-apoptotic responses that are dependent on Tat concentration. | [ |
| Adipogenic differentiation | Enhanced adipogenesis. | Upregulates expression of | |||
| Endothelial cell differentiation | Inhibited endothelial differentiation. | Downregulates expression of endothelial markers | |||
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 Rev and p55-gag protein | Osteogenic differentiation | Rev: pro-osteogenic effect. p55-gag: decreased osteogenesis. | Rev increases calcium deposition and ALP activity. p55-gag decreases calcium deposition and ALP activity by downregulating BMP-2 and osteocalcin secretion and | [ |
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 p55-gag and Rev protein | Osteogenic differentiation | p55-gag: reduced overall level of osteogenesis. Rev: increased overall rate of mineralisation. | p55-gag leads to an earlier increase in CTGF levels, RUNX-2 activity and BMP-2 secretion. Rev reduces BMP-2 secretion, RUNX-2 activity, CTGF levels and ALP activity. | [ |
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 Tat and Nef protein | Cell senescence | Reduced proliferative activity and induced senescence. | Results from increased oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. Tat induces early increase in NF-κB activity and cytokine/ chemokine secretion, and these effects are prevented with an NF-κB inhibitor. Nef induces early inhibition of autophagy, and this effect is reversed with an autophagy inducer. | [ |
| Osteogenic differentiation | Decreased osteogenic differentiation. | Lower level of RUNX-2 protein, decreased | |||
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 p55-gag protein | Senescence | Inhibited proliferation and induced senescence. | Not reported. | [ |
| Hematopoietic supportive function | Reduced HSC colony forming capability, HSC expansion and p55-gag BM-MSCs did not express TPO and HGF (by RT-qPCR and ELISA) and had decreased expression for Flt3L, SCF, IL-7, and IL-8 cytokines. | BM-MSC senescence and decreased production of cytokines impacts HSC homeostasis. | |||
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 Tat protein Transfected with HIV-1 | Hematopoietic supportive function | Reduced expansion and CFU forming capacity of HSCs co-cultured with BM-MSC. BM-MSCs lost their ability to assist hematopoietic recovery after co-transplantation of HSCs and BM-MSCs | Tat protein inhibits hematopoietic support function of BM-MSCs by reducing hematopoietic cytokine expression by BM-MSCs possibly induced by BM-MSC senescence. | [ |
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 gp120 protein | Cell migration | Enhanced cell migration of MSCs in response to SDF-1. | Upregulates CXCR4 (protein and mRNA expression as well as cell surface expression), leading to amplification of the FAK-Paxillin and ERK 1/2 signalling pathways. | [ |
| ASCs | HIV-1 Tat and Nef protein | Proliferation and ECM production | Induced profibrotic phenotype. Increased mRNA and protein levels of collagen 1-α1. | Increases secretion of fibronectin and TGF-β1 and expression of the myofibroblast marker, αSMA. | [ |
| Adipogenesis and ECM production | Nef, but not Tat decreases cellular lipid accumulation. Nef induced collagen 1-α2 expression and both HIV-1 proteins induced collagen 6-α1 expression. | Downregulates expression of PPARγ and FABP4 (protein and/or mRNA). | |||
| BM-MSCs | HIV-1 virus HIV-1 Tat protein | Clonogenic ability and developmental potential | Suppressed the proliferation and differentiation of MSC-derived colony formation. | Increases levels of inflammatory cytokines being released. | [ |
Abbreviations: (BM)-MSCs (Bone marrow-derived) mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, ASCs adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, HSCs hematopoietic stem cells, TPO thrombopoietin, Flt3L Flt-3 ligand, SCF stem cell factor. IL interleukin, HGF hepatocyte growth factor, BMP-2 bone morphogenic protein-2, RUNX-2 Runt-related transcription factor 2, PPARγ Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, CTGF Connective tissue growth factor, ALP alkaline phosphatase, vWF von Willebrand factor, Flt-1 Fms related receptor tyrosine kinase-1, KDR kinase insert domain, C/EBP β or δ CCAAT/enhanced-binding protein beta or delta, FABP4 Fatty acid-binding protein 4, ERK 1/2 Extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, FAK Focal adhesion kinase, αSMA alpha smooth muscle actin, TGF-β1 Transforming growth factor beta 1, CXCR4 CXC-chemokine receptor 4, NFκB Nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells, CFU colony forming unit, RT-qPCR reverse transcription quantitative PCR, gp120 HIV-1 glycoprotein 120