Peters Paul J, Bhattacharya Jayanta, Hibbitts Samantha, Dittmar Matthias T, Simmons Graham, Bell Jeanne, Simmonds Peter, Clapham Paul R
Program in Molecular Medicine and Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester MA 01605, USA.
J Virol. 2004 Jul;78(13):6915-26. doi: 10.1128/JVI.78.13.6915-6926.2004.
Complete envelope genes were amplified from autopsy brain tissue of five individuals who had died of AIDS and had neurological complications. Lymph node samples were included for two of the patients. Nineteen different envelope clones from the five patients had distinct V1V2 sequences. Thirteen of the envelopes were functional and conferred fusigenicity and infectivity for CD4(+) CCR5(+) cells. Infectivity and cell-cell fusion assays showed that most envelopes used both CCR5 and CCR3. One brain-derived envelope used a broad range of coreceptors, while three other brain envelopes from one individual were restricted to CCR5. However, there was no correlation between tissue of origin and coreceptor use. Envelopes showed two very distinct phenotypes depending on their capacity to infect macrophages and to exploit low levels of CD4 and/or CCR5 for infection. Envelopes that were highly fusigenic and tropic for macrophages were identified in brain tissue from four of the five patients. The enhanced macrophage tropism correlated with reduced sensitivity to inhibition by Q4120, a CD4-specific antibody, but not with sensitivity to the CCR5 inhibitor, TAK779. The highly macrophage-tropic envelopes were able to infect cells expressing low levels of CD4 and/or CCR5. Comparison with several well-characterized macrophage-tropic envelopes showed that the four identified patient envelopes were at the top limit of macrophage tropism. In contrast, all four lymph node-derived envelopes exhibited a non-macrophage-tropic phenotype and required high levels of CD4 for infection. Our data support the presence of envelopes that are highly fusigenic and tropic for macrophages in the brains of patients with neurological complications. These envelopes are able to infect cells that express low levels of CD4 and/or CCR5 and may have adapted for replication in brain macrophages and microglia, which are known to express limited amounts of CD4.
从五名死于艾滋病且有神经并发症的个体的尸检脑组织中扩增出完整的包膜基因。其中两名患者还包括淋巴结样本。来自这五名患者的19个不同的包膜克隆具有不同的V1V2序列。其中13个包膜具有功能,对CD4(+) CCR5(+)细胞具有融合性和感染性。感染性和细胞间融合试验表明,大多数包膜同时使用CCR5和CCR3。一个源自脑的包膜使用多种共受体,而来自同一个体的另外三个脑包膜则仅限于CCR5。然而,来源组织与共受体使用之间没有相关性。根据包膜感染巨噬细胞以及利用低水平的CD4和/或CCR5进行感染的能力,包膜表现出两种非常不同的表型。在五名患者中的四名患者的脑组织中鉴定出对巨噬细胞具有高融合性和嗜性的包膜。增强的巨噬细胞嗜性与对CD4特异性抗体Q4120抑制的敏感性降低相关,但与对CCR5抑制剂TAK779的敏感性无关。高度嗜巨噬细胞的包膜能够感染表达低水平CD4和/或CCR5的细胞。与几个特征明确的嗜巨噬细胞包膜比较表明,鉴定出的四个患者包膜处于巨噬细胞嗜性的上限。相比之下,所有四个源自淋巴结的包膜都表现出非嗜巨噬细胞的表型,并且感染需要高水平的CD4。我们的数据支持在有神经并发症的患者大脑中存在对巨噬细胞具有高融合性和嗜性的包膜。这些包膜能够感染表达低水平CD4和/或CCR5的细胞,并且可能已经适应在已知表达有限量CD4的脑巨噬细胞和小胶质细胞中复制。