Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Immunology Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave Levy Place, Box 1630, New York, NY 10029, USA.
J Virol. 2011 Jul;85(14):7169-76. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00231-11. Epub 2011 May 4.
During cell-to-cell transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), many viral particles can be simultaneously transferred from infected to uninfected CD4 T cells through structures called virological synapses (VS). Here we directly examine how cell-free and cell-to-cell infections differ from infections initiated with cell-free virus in the number of genetic copies that are transmitted from one generation to the next, i.e., the genetic inheritance. Following exposure to HIV-1-expressing cells, we show that target cells with high viral uptake are much more likely to become infected. Using T cells that coexpress distinct fluorescent HIV-1 variants, we show that multiple copies of HIV-1 can be cotransmitted across a single VS. In contrast to cell-free HIV-1 infection, which titrates with Poisson statistics, the titration of cell-associated HIV-1 to low rates of overall infection generates a constant fraction of the newly infected cells that are cofluorescent. Triple infection was also readily detected when cells expressing three fluorescent viruses were used as donor cells. A computational model and a statistical model are presented to estimate the degree to which cofluorescence underestimates coinfection frequency. Lastly, direct detection of HIV-1 proviruses using fluorescence in situ hybridization confirmed that significantly more HIV-1 DNA copies are found in primary T cells infected with cell-associated virus than in those infected with cell-free virus. Together, the data suggest that multiploid inheritance is common during cell-to-cell HIV-1 infection. From this study, we suggest that cell-to-cell infection may explain the high copy numbers of proviruses found in infected cells in vivo and may provide a mechanism through which HIV preserves sequence heterogeneity in viral quasispecies through genetic complementation.
在人类免疫缺陷病毒 1 型(HIV-1)的细胞间传播过程中,许多病毒颗粒可以通过称为病毒突触(VS)的结构同时从感染细胞转移到未感染的 CD4 T 细胞。在这里,我们直接研究了无细胞感染和细胞间感染与从一代到下一代传递的遗传物质数量(即遗传遗传)的差异。在暴露于表达 HIV-1 的细胞后,我们表明,具有高病毒摄取量的靶细胞更有可能被感染。使用共表达不同荧光 HIV-1 变体的 T 细胞,我们表明,多个 HIV-1 拷贝可以通过单个 VS 共传输。与泊松统计学相关的细胞游离 HIV-1 感染相反,细胞相关 HIV-1 的滴定度以低总体感染率产生新感染细胞的恒定分数,该分数是共荧光的。当用作供体细胞的细胞表达三种荧光病毒时,也容易检测到三重感染。提出了一个计算模型和一个统计模型来估计共荧光如何低估共感染频率的程度。最后,使用荧光原位杂交直接检测 HIV-1 前病毒证实,与感染无细胞病毒的原发性 T 细胞相比,感染细胞相关病毒的原发性 T 细胞中发现的 HIV-1 DNA 拷贝数明显更多。总之,数据表明多倍体遗传在细胞间 HIV-1 感染中很常见。从这项研究中,我们提出细胞间感染可能解释了体内感染细胞中发现的高拷贝数前病毒,并可能为 HIV 通过遗传互补在病毒准种中保存序列异质性提供了一种机制。