Lane B R, Markovitz D M, Woodford N L, Rochford R, Strieter R M, Coffey M J
Department of Internal Medicine, Graduate Program in Cellular and Molecular Biology, School of Public Health, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor 48109, USA.
J Immunol. 1999 Oct 1;163(7):3653-61.
The pathogenesis of HIV-1 infection is influenced by the immunoregulatory responses of the host. Macrophages present in the lymphoid tissue are susceptible to infection with HIV-1, but are relatively resistant to its cytopathic effects and serve as a reservoir for the virus during the course of disease. Previous investigators have demonstrated that increased serum levels of TNF-alpha contribute to the clinical symptoms of AIDS and that TNF-alpha stimulates the production of HIV-1 in chronically infected lymphocytic and monocytic cell lines by increasing HIV-1 gene expression. Although previous studies have suggested that TNF-alpha may increase HIV-1 infection of primary human mononuclear cells, some recent studies have indicated that TNF-alpha suppresses HIV-1 infection of macrophages. We now demonstrate that TNF-alpha suppresses HIV-1 replication in freshly infected peripheral blood monocytes (PBM) and alveolar macrophages (AM) in a dose-dependent manner. As TNF-alpha has been shown to increase the production of C-C chemokine receptor (CCR5)-binding chemokines under certain circumstances, we hypothesized that TNF-alpha inhibits HIV-1 replication by increasing the expression of these HIV-suppressive factors. We now show that TNF-alpha treatment of PBM and AM increases the production of the C-C chemokine, RANTES. Immunodepletion of RANTES alone or in combination with macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha and -1beta block the ability of TNF-alpha to suppress viral replication in PBM and AM. In addition, we found that TNF-alpha treatment reduces CCR5 expression on PBM and AM. These findings suggest that TNF-alpha plays a significant role in inhibiting monocytotropic strains of HIV-1 by two distinct, but complementary, mechanisms.
HIV-1感染的发病机制受宿主免疫调节反应的影响。存在于淋巴组织中的巨噬细胞易受HIV-1感染,但对其细胞病变效应相对具有抗性,并在疾病过程中作为病毒的储存库。先前的研究人员已证明,血清中肿瘤坏死因子-α(TNF-α)水平升高会导致艾滋病的临床症状,且TNF-α通过增加HIV-1基因表达来刺激慢性感染的淋巴细胞和单核细胞系中HIV-1的产生。尽管先前的研究表明TNF-α可能会增加原代人单核细胞的HIV-1感染,但最近的一些研究表明TNF-α会抑制巨噬细胞的HIV-1感染。我们现在证明,TNF-α以剂量依赖的方式抑制新鲜感染的外周血单核细胞(PBM)和肺泡巨噬细胞(AM)中的HIV-1复制。由于TNF-α已被证明在某些情况下会增加C-C趋化因子受体(CCR5)结合趋化因子的产生,我们推测TNF-α通过增加这些HIV抑制因子的表达来抑制HIV-1复制。我们现在表明,用TNF-α处理PBM和AM会增加C-C趋化因子RANTES的产生。单独或与巨噬细胞炎性蛋白-1α和-1β联合免疫去除RANTES会阻断TNF-α抑制PBM和AM中病毒复制的能力。此外,我们发现用TNF-α处理会降低PBM和AM上CCR5的表达。这些发现表明,TNF-α通过两种不同但互补的机制在抑制HIV-1的嗜单核细胞株中发挥重要作用。