Seu Lillian, Sabbaj Steffanie, Duverger Alexandra, Wagner Frederic, Anderson Joshua C, Davies Elizabeth, Wolschendorf Frank, Willey Christopher D, Saag Michael S, Goepfert Paul, Kutsch Olaf
Department of Medicine, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Radiation Oncology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
J Virol. 2015 Jul;89(13):6656-72. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00571-15. Epub 2015 Apr 15.
The extreme stability of the latent HIV-1 reservoir in the CD4(+) memory T cell population prevents viral eradication with current antiretroviral therapy. It has been demonstrated that homeostatic T cell proliferation and clonal expansion of latently infected T cells due to viral integration into specific genes contribute to this extraordinary reservoir stability. Nevertheless, given the constant exposure of the memory T cell population to specific antigen or bystander activation, this reservoir stability seems remarkable, unless it is assumed that latent HIV-1 resides exclusively in memory T cells that recognize rare antigens. Another explanation for the stability of the reservoir could be that the latent HIV-1 reservoir is associated with an unresponsive T cell phenotype. We demonstrate here that host cells of latent HIV-1 infection events were functionally altered in ways that are consistent with the idea of an anergic, unresponsive T cell phenotype. Manipulations that induced or mimicked an anergic T cell state promoted latent HIV-1 infection. Kinome analysis data reflected this altered host cell phenotype at a system-wide level and revealed how the stable kinase activity changes networked to stabilize latent HIV-1 infection. Protein-protein interaction networks generated from kinome data could further be used to guide targeted genetic or pharmacological manipulations that alter the stability of latent HIV-1 infection. In summary, our data demonstrate that stable changes to the signal transduction and transcription factor network of latently HIV-1 infected host cells are essential to the ability of HIV-1 to establish and maintain latent HIV-1 infection status.
The extreme stability of the latent HIV-1 reservoir allows the infection to persist for the lifetime of a patient, despite completely suppressive antiretroviral therapy. This extreme reservoir stability is somewhat surprising, since the latently HIV-1 infected CD4(+) memory T cells that form the structural basis of the viral reservoir should be exposed to cognate antigen over time. Antigen exposure would trigger a recall response and should deplete the reservoir, likely over a relatively short period. Our data demonstrate that stable and system-wide phenotypic changes to host cells are a prerequisite for the establishment and maintenance of latent HIV-1 infection events. The changes observed are consistent with an unresponsive, anergy-like T cell phenotype of latently HIV-1 infected host cells. An anergy-like, unresponsive state of the host cells of latent HIV-1 infection events would explain the stability of the HIV-1 reservoir in the face of continuous antigen exposure.
潜伏的HIV-1储库在CD4(+)记忆T细胞群体中的极端稳定性使得当前的抗逆转录病毒疗法无法根除病毒。已经证明,由于病毒整合到特定基因中导致的稳态T细胞增殖和潜伏感染T细胞的克隆扩增促成了这种非凡的储库稳定性。然而,鉴于记忆T细胞群体持续暴露于特定抗原或旁观者激活,这种储库稳定性似乎很显著,除非假定潜伏的HIV-1仅存在于识别稀有抗原的记忆T细胞中。储库稳定性的另一种解释可能是潜伏的HIV-1储库与无反应性T细胞表型相关。我们在此证明,潜伏HIV-1感染事件的宿主细胞在功能上发生了改变,这些改变与无反应性、无反应性T细胞表型的概念一致。诱导或模拟无反应性T细胞状态的操作促进了潜伏HIV-1感染。激酶组分析数据在全系统水平上反映了这种改变的宿主细胞表型,并揭示了稳定的激酶活性变化如何相互关联以稳定潜伏HIV-1感染。从激酶组数据生成的蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用网络可进一步用于指导改变潜伏HIV-1感染稳定性的靶向基因或药理学操作。总之,我们的数据表明,潜伏HIV-1感染宿主细胞的信号转导和转录因子网络的稳定变化对于HIV-1建立和维持潜伏HIV-1感染状态的能力至关重要。
潜伏的HIV-1储库的极端稳定性使得感染在患者的一生中持续存在,尽管有完全抑制性的抗逆转录病毒疗法。这种极端的储库稳定性有点令人惊讶,因为构成病毒储库结构基础的潜伏HIV-1感染的CD4(+)记忆T细胞应该随着时间的推移暴露于同源抗原。抗原暴露会引发回忆反应,并且可能在相对较短的时间内耗尽储库。我们的数据表明,宿主细胞稳定且全系统的表型变化是建立和维持潜伏HIV-1感染事件的先决条件。观察到的变化与潜伏HIV-1感染宿主细胞的无反应性、类似无反应性的T细胞表型一致。潜伏HIV-1感染事件的宿主细胞的类似无反应性、无反应性状态将解释HIV-1储库在持续抗原暴露面前的稳定性。