Kornbluth R S, Oh P S, Munis J R, Cleveland P H, Richman D D
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego.
J Exp Med. 1989 Mar 1;169(3):1137-51. doi: 10.1084/jem.169.3.1137.
To determine the effects of immunomodulatory agents upon HIV replication in macrophages, cultured monocyte-derived macrophages were treated with various substances and then infected with a macrophage-tropic strain of HIV-1. Pretreatment with rIFN-alpha, IFN-beta, and IFN-gamma, or bacterial LPS prevented viral replication in macrophages. In treated cultures, little or no infectious HIV or p24 core antigen was released into the supernatant, no virions were seen by electron microscopy, no viral RNA or DNA was detectable in the cell lysates, and no cytopathology (as determined by multinucleated giant cell formation) occurred. In contrast, pretreatment with a wide dose range of recombinant IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, M-CSF, TNF, or lymphotoxin failed to protect macrophages from productive infection by HIV. A consistent effect of granulocyte/macrophage-CSF on HIV replication in macrophages was not observed. In dose response studies, pretreatment with approximately 100 U/ml of IFN-alpha, approximately 10 U/ml of IFN-beta, or approximately 100 U/ml of IFN-gamma was sufficient to prevent virion release maximally and to prevent cytopathology completely. In kinetic studies, IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, or LPS were added to the macrophage cultures either before or after infection with HIV. Even when added 3 d after infection with a multiplicity of 1 50% tissue-culture infectious dose per cell, all three treatments markedly reduced virion release, suggesting that these agents act at a point in the viral life cycle beyond the early events of virus binding, penetration, and uncoating. These data indicate that HIV replication in previously uninfected macrophages may be regulated by an inducible host cell mechanism. These findings may explain the restricted replication of HIV in macrophages in vivo and suggest an antiviral role for interferons in the therapy of HIV infection.
为了确定免疫调节因子对巨噬细胞中HIV复制的影响,用各种物质处理培养的单核细胞衍生巨噬细胞,然后用HIV-1的巨噬细胞嗜性毒株感染。用重组IFN-α、IFN-β、IFN-γ或细菌脂多糖预处理可防止巨噬细胞中的病毒复制。在经处理的培养物中,很少或没有传染性HIV或p24核心抗原释放到上清液中,电子显微镜下未见到病毒粒子,细胞裂解物中未检测到病毒RNA或DNA,并且未发生细胞病变(通过多核巨细胞形成确定)。相比之下,用宽剂量范围的重组IL-1β、IL-2、IL-4、IL-6、M-CSF、TNF或淋巴毒素预处理未能保护巨噬细胞免受HIV的有效感染。未观察到粒细胞/巨噬细胞集落刺激因子对巨噬细胞中HIV复制的一致作用。在剂量反应研究中,用约100 U/ml的IFN-α、约10 U/ml的IFN-β或约100 U/ml的IFN-γ预处理足以最大程度地防止病毒粒子释放并完全防止细胞病变。在动力学研究中,在感染HIV之前或之后将IFN-α、IFN-γ或脂多糖添加到巨噬细胞培养物中。即使在以每细胞1个50%组织培养感染剂量的复数感染后3天添加,所有三种处理均显著减少病毒粒子释放,这表明这些因子在病毒生命周期中作用于病毒结合、穿透和解衣壳的早期事件之后的某个点。这些数据表明,HIV在先前未感染的巨噬细胞中的复制可能受诱导性宿主细胞机制调节。这些发现可能解释了HIV在体内巨噬细胞中复制受限的原因,并提示干扰素在HIV感染治疗中具有抗病毒作用。