Allen Shannon A, Carias Ann M, Anderson Meegan R, Okocha Eneniziaogochukwu A, Benning Lorie, McRaven Michael D, Kelley Z L, Lurain John, Veazey Ronald S, Hope Thomas J
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Virol. 2015 May;89(10):5569-80. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00309-15. Epub 2015 Mar 4.
The majority of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission events occur in women when semen harboring infectious virus is deposited onto the mucosal barriers of the vaginal, ectocervical, and endocervical epithelia. Seminal factors such as semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI) fibrils were previously shown to greatly enhance the infectivity of HIV-1 in cell culture systems. However, when SEVI is intravaginally applied to living animals, there is no effect on vaginal transmission. To define how SEVI might function in the context of sexual transmission, we applied HIV-1 and SEVI to intact human and rhesus macaque reproductive tract tissues to determine how it influences virus interactions with these barriers. We show that SEVI binds HIV-1 and sequesters most virions to the luminal surface of the stratified squamous epithelium, significantly reducing the number of virions that penetrated the tissue. In the simple columnar epithelium, SEVI was no longer fibrillar in structure and was detached from virions but allowed significantly deeper epithelial virus penetration. These observations reveal that the action of SEVI in intact tissues is very different in the anatomical context of sexual transmission and begin to explain the lack of stimulation of infection observed in the highly relevant mucosal transmission model.
The most common mode of HIV-1 transmission in women occurs via genital exposure to the semen of HIV-infected men. A productive infection requires the virus to penetrate female reproductive tract epithelial barriers to infect underlying target cells. Certain factors identified within semen, termed semen-derived enhancers of virus infection (SEVI), have been shown to significantly enhance HIV-1 infectivity in cell culture. However, when applied to the genital tracts of living female macaques, SEVI did not enhance virus transmission. Here we show that SEVI functions very differently in the context of intact mucosal tissues. SEVI decreases HIV-1 penetration of squamous epithelial barriers in humans and macaques. At the mucus-coated columnar epithelial barrier, the HIV-1/SEVI interaction is disrupted. These observations suggest that SEVI may not play a significant stimulatory role in the efficiency of male-to-female sexual transmission of HIV.
大多数人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)传播事件发生在女性身上,即携带感染性病毒的精液沉积在阴道、宫颈外口和宫颈内口上皮的黏膜屏障上时。精液衍生的病毒感染增强因子(SEVI)纤维等精液因子先前已被证明能在细胞培养系统中极大地增强HIV-1的感染性。然而,当将SEVI经阴道应用于活体动物时,对阴道传播没有影响。为了确定SEVI在性传播过程中可能如何发挥作用,我们将HIV-1和SEVI应用于完整的人类和恒河猴生殖道组织,以确定其如何影响病毒与这些屏障的相互作用。我们发现SEVI与HIV-1结合,并将大多数病毒粒子隔离在复层鳞状上皮的管腔表面,显著减少穿透组织的病毒粒子数量。在单层柱状上皮中,SEVI的结构不再呈纤维状,且与病毒粒子分离,但允许病毒更深地穿透上皮。这些观察结果表明,SEVI在完整组织中的作用在性传播的解剖学背景下非常不同,并开始解释在高度相关的黏膜传播模型中观察到的感染刺激缺乏的现象。
女性中HIV-1最常见的传播方式是通过生殖器接触感染HIV的男性精液。有效的感染需要病毒穿透女性生殖道上皮屏障以感染潜在的靶细胞。精液中鉴定出的某些因子,称为精液衍生的病毒感染增强因子(SEVI),已被证明能在细胞培养中显著增强HIV-1的感染性。然而,当应用于活体雌性猕猴的生殖道时,SEVI并未增强病毒传播。在这里我们表明,SEVI在完整黏膜组织的背景下功能非常不同。SEVI减少了HIV-1在人类和猕猴鳞状上皮屏障中的穿透。在有黏液覆盖的柱状上皮屏障处,HIV-1/SEVI相互作用被破坏。这些观察结果表明,SEVI在HIV从男性到女性的性传播效率中可能不发挥显著的刺激作用。