Li P, Kuiper L J, Stephenson A J, Burrell C J
National Centre for HIV Virology Research, Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science, Adelaide, Australia.
J Gen Virol. 1992 Apr;73 ( Pt 4):955-9. doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-73-4-955.
The proposal that replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), mediated by cell-to-cell transmission of the virus, might bypass de novo reverse transcription was tested by using one-step cell-to-cell and cell-free virus infection systems. Two well characterized reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors, azidothymidine at 20 microM and phosphonoformic acid at 100 micrograms/ml, blocked HIV replication completely following both cell-free virus and cell-to-cell transmission infection, as determined from the kinetics of unintegrated viral DNA synthesis and supernatant RT production after virus infection. Our results confirm that de novo reverse transcription is a crucial and mandatory event in HIV-1 replication following cell-to-cell transmission of the virus.