Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7295, USA.
J Virol. 2010 Mar;84(5):2395-407. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01863-09. Epub 2009 Dec 16.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-associated dementia (HAD) is a severe neurological disease that affects a subset of HIV-1-infected individuals. Increased compartmentalization has been reported between blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) HIV-1 populations in subjects with HAD, but it is still not known when compartmentalization arises during the course of infection. To assess HIV-1 genetic compartmentalization early during infection, we compared HIV-1 populations in the peripheral blood and CSF in 11 primary infection subjects, with analysis of longitudinal samples over the first 18 months for a subset of subjects. We used heteroduplex tracking assays targeting the variable regions of env and single-genome amplification and sequence analysis of the full-length env gene to identify CSF-compartmentalized variants and to examine viral genotypes within the compartmentalized populations. For most subjects, HIV-1 populations were equilibrated between the blood and CSF compartments. However, compartmentalized HIV-1 populations were detected in the CSF of three primary infection subjects, and longitudinal analysis of one subject revealed that compartmentalization during primary HIV-1 infection was resolved. Clonal amplification of specific HIV-1 variants was identified in the CSF population of one primary infection subject. Our data show that compartmentalization can occur in the central nervous system (CNS) of subjects in primary HIV-1 infection in part through persistence of the putative transmitted parental variant or via viral genetic adaptation to the CNS environment. The presence of distinct HIV-1 populations in the CSF indicates that independent HIV-1 replication can occur in the CNS, even early after HIV-1 transmission.
人类免疫缺陷病毒 1 型(HIV-1)相关痴呆症(HAD)是一种严重的神经疾病,影响了 HIV-1 感染者的一部分。在 HAD 患者中,已经报道了血液和脑脊液(CSF)HIV-1 群体之间的分隔增加,但仍不清楚在感染过程中何时出现分隔。为了在感染早期评估 HIV-1 遗传分隔,我们比较了 11 例原发性感染患者外周血和脑脊液中的 HIV-1 群体,并对其中一部分患者的纵向样本进行了长达 18 个月的分析。我们使用靶向 env 可变区的异源双链跟踪分析和全长 env 基因的单基因组扩增和序列分析来鉴定 CSF 分隔变体,并检查分隔群体中的病毒基因型。对于大多数患者,HIV-1 群体在血液和脑脊液之间达到平衡。然而,在三个原发性感染患者的脑脊液中检测到了分隔的 HIV-1 群体,对一个患者的纵向分析表明,原发性 HIV-1 感染期间的分隔得到了解决。在一个原发性感染患者的脑脊液人群中,鉴定出了特定 HIV-1 变体的克隆扩增。我们的数据表明,分隔可以通过假定的传播亲本变体的持续存在或通过病毒对中枢神经系统环境的遗传适应,在原发性 HIV-1 感染患者的中枢神经系统(CNS)中发生。CSF 中存在不同的 HIV-1 群体表明,即使在 HIV-1 传播后早期,独立的 HIV-1 复制也可以在中枢神经系统中发生。